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Copyright © Devdutt Pattanaik 2015
Illustrations Copyright © Devdutt Pattanaik 2015

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To my friends Partho, who listens Paromita, who sees
Contents
□ Why My Gita
□ Before My Gita: A Brief History of The Gita
□ My Gita
○ 1. You and I do not have to judge
○ 2. You and I have been here before
○ 3. You and I experience life differently
○ 4. You and I seek meaning
○ 5. You and I have to face consequences
○ 6. You and I can empathize
○ 7. You and I can exchange
○ 8. You and I withdraw in fear
○ 9. You and I hesitate to trust
○ 10. You and I have potential
○ 11. You and I can include
○ 12. You and I can accommodate
○ 13. You and I have no control
○ 14. You and I value property
○ 15. You and I compare
○ 16. You and I cling
○ 17. You and I can be generous
○ 18. You and I matter to each other
□ After My Gita: Yet Another Discourse by Krishna
□ Recommended Reading
Why My Gita

T he Bhagavad Gita, or The Gita as it is popularly known, is part of the epic


Mahabharata.

The Bhagavad Gita

The epic describes the war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas on the
battlefield of Kuru-kshetra. The Gita is the discourse given by Krishna to Arjuna
just before the war is about to begin. Krishna is identified as God (bhagavan).
His words contain the essence of Vedic wisdom, the keystone of Hinduism.
Ramkrishna Paramhansa, the nineteenth-century Bengali mystic, said that
the essence of The Gita can be deciphered simply by reversing the syllables that
constitute Gita. So Gita, or gi-ta, becomes ta-gi, or tyagi, which means 'one who
lets go of possessions.'

Gi-ta to Ta-gi

Given that, it is ironical that I call this book ‘My Gita’.


I use the possessive pronoun for three reasons.

Reason 1: My Gita is thematic

The Gita demonstrates many modern techniques of communication. First,


Arjuna’s problem is presented (Chapter 1), and then Krishna’s solution (chapters
2 to 18) is offered. Krishna begins by telling Arjuna what he will reveal (Chapter
2); he then elaborates on what he promised to tell (chapters 3 to 17); and finally,
he repeats what he has told (Chapter 18). Krishna’s solution involves analysis
(sankhya) and synthesis (yoga)—slicing the whole into parts and then binding
the parts into a whole. The solution itself is comprehensive, involving the
behavioural (karma yoga), the emotional (bhakti yoga) and the intellectual
(gyana yoga). However, no one reads The Gita as a book, or hears every verse in
a single sitting.
Chapter Architecture in The Gita

Traditionally, a guru would only elaborate on a particular verse or a set of


verses or a chapter of The Gita at a time. It is only in modern times, with a
printed book in hand, that we want to read The Gita cover to cover, chapter by
chapter, verse to verse, and hope to work our way through to a climax of
resolutions in one go. When we attempt to do so, we are disappointed. For,
unlike modern writing, The Gita is not linear: some ideas are scattered over
several chapters, many ideas are constantly repeated, and still others presuppose
knowledge of concepts found elsewhere, in earlier Vedic and Upanishadic texts.
In fact, The Gita specifically refers to the Brahma sutras (Chapter 13, Verse 5),
also known as Vedanta sutras, said to have been composed by one Badarayana,
sometimes identified with Vyasa. Further, at places, the same words are used in
different verses to convey different meanings, and at other instances, different
words are used to convey the same idea. For example, sometimes the word
‘atma’ means mind and sometimes soul; at other times other words like dehi,
brahmana and purusha are used for soul instead of atma. This can be rather
disorienting to a casual reader, and open to multiple interpretations.
So My Gita departs from the traditional presentation of The Gita—sequential
verse-by-verse translations followed by commentary. Instead, My Gita is
arranged thematically. The sequence of themes broadly follows the sequence in
The Gita. Each theme is explained using several verses across multiple chapters.
The verses are paraphrased, not translated or transliterated. These paraphrased
verses make better sense when juxtaposed with Vedic, Upanishadic and
Buddhist lore that preceded The Gita and stories from the Mahabharata, the
Ramayana and the Puranas that followed it. Understanding deepens further when
the Hindu worldview is contrasted with other worldviews and placed in a
historical context.
For those seeking the standard literal and linear approach, there is a
recommended reading list at the end of the book.

Reason 2: My Gita is subjective

We never actually hear what Krishna told Arjuna. We simply overhear what
Sanjaya transmitted faithfully to the blind king Dhritarashtra in the comforts of
the palace, having witnessed all that occurred on the distant battlefield, thanks to
his telepathic sight. The Gita we overhear is essentially that which is narrated by
a man with no authority but infinite sight (Sanjaya) to a man with no sight but
full authority (Dhritarashtra). This peculiar structure of the narrative draws
attention to the vast gap between what is told (gyana) and what is heard (vi-
gyana).
Krishna and Sanjaya may speak exactly the same words, but while Krishna
knows what he is talking about, Sanjaya does not. Krishna is the source, while
Sanjaya is merely a transmitter. Likewise, what Sanjaya hears is different from
what Arjuna hears and what Dhritarashtra hears. Sanjaya hears the words, but
does not bother with the meaning. Arjuna is a seeker and so he decodes what he
hears to find a solution to his problem. Dhritarashtra is not interested in what
Krishna has to say. While Arjuna asks many questions and clarifications,
ensuring the ‘discourse’ is a ‘conversation’, Dhritarashtra remains silent
throughout. In fact, Dhritarashtra is fearful of Krishna who is fighting against his
children, the Kauravas. So he judges Krishna’s words, accepting what serves
him, dismissing what does not.

Overhearing The Gita

I am not the source of The Gita. But I do not want to be merely its
transmitter, like Sanjaya. I want to understand, like Arjuna, though I have no
problem I want to solve, neither do I stand on the brink of any battle. But it has
been said that the Vedic wisdom presented by Krishna is applicable to all
contexts, not just Arjuna’s. So I have spent months hearing The Gita in the
original Sanskrit to appreciate its musicality; reading multiple commentaries,
retellings and translations; mapping the patterns that emerge from it with
patterns found in Hindu mythology; and comparing and contrasting these
patterns with those found in Buddhist, Greek and Abrahamic mythologies. This
book contains my understanding of The Gita, my subjective truth: my Gita. You
can approach this book as Arjuna, with curiosity, or as Dhritarashtra, with
suspicion and judgement. What you take away will be your subjective truth:
your Gita.
The quest for objective truth (what did Krishna actually say?) invariably
results in vi-vaad, argument, where you try to prove that your truth is the truth
and I try to prove that my truth is the truth. The quest for subjective truth (how
does The Gita make sense to me?) results in sam-vaad, where you and I seek to
appreciate each other’s viewpoints and expand our respective truths. It allows
everyone to discover The Gita at his or her own pace, on his or her own terms,
by listening to the various Gitas around them.

Argument and Discussion

Objectivity is obsessed with exactness and tends to be rather intolerant of


deviation, almost like the jealous God of monotheistic mythologies. But
meanings change over time, with the personality of the reader, and with context.
Subjectivity challenges the assumption that ideas are fixed and can be
controlled; it celebrates the fluid. Modern global discourse tends to look at truth
qualitatively: it is either true or false. That which is objective is scientific and
true. That which is subjective is mythic and false. Hindu thought, however, looks
at truth quantitatively: everyone has access to a slice (bhaga); the one who sees
all slices of truth is bhagavan. Limited truth is mithya. Limitless truth is satya.
Satya is about including everything and being whole (purnam). The journey
towards limitless truth expands our mind (brahmana).
The Gita itself values subjectivity: after concluding his counsel, Krishna tells
Arjuna to reflect on what has been said, and then do as he feels (yatha-ichasi-
tatha-kuru). Even Sanjaya, after giving his view on what Krishna’s discourse
potentially offers, concludes The Gita with the phrase ‘in my opinion’ (mati-
mama).

Reason 3: My Gita is not obsessed with the self

Traditionally, The Gita has been presented as a text that focusses on self-
realization (atma-gyana). This suits the hermit who isolates himself from society.
This is not surprising, since most early commentators and retellers of The Gita,
such as Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhwa and Dyaneshwara, chose not to be
householders. The original Buddhist monastic order may not have survived in
India, but it did play a key role in the rise and dominance of the Hindu monastic
order. The monastic approach willy-nilly appeals to the modern individualist,
who also seeks self-exploration, self-examination, self-actualization and, of
course, selfies.

Shankara

But the Mahabharata is about the household, about relationships, about


others. It is essentially about a property dispute. Arjuna’s dilemma begins when
he realizes that the enemy is family and he fears the impact of killing family on
society as a whole. Krishna’s discourse continuously speaks of yagna, a Vedic
ritual that binds the individual to the community. He elaborates on the
relationship of the individual, whom he identifies as jiva-atma, with divinity,
whom he identifies as param-atma, which is etymologically related to ‘the other’
(para). The Buddha spoke of nirvana, which means oblivion of individual
identity, but Krishna speaks of brahma-nirvana as an expansion of the mind
(brahmana) that leads to liberation (moksha) while ironically also enabling union
(yoga), indicating a shift away from monastic isolationism. That is why, in
Hindu temples, God is always visualized with the Goddess as a householder, one
half of a pair. The devotee looks at the deity (darshan) and the deity, with large
unblinking eyes, looks back; the relationship is ‘two-way’ not ‘one-way’.

Relationships

In Chapter 5, Verse 13, of The Gita, Krishna describes the human body as a
city with nine gates (nava-dvara-pura): two eyes, two ears, two nostrils, one
mouth, one anus and one genital. A relationship involves two bodies, two
people, the self and the other, you and me, two cities—eighteen gates in all. That
The Gita has eighteen sections, that it seeks to make sense of the eighteen books
of the Mahabharata—which tells the story of a war between family and friends
fought over eighteen days involving eighteen armies—indicates that the core
teaching of The Gita has much to do with relationships. It serves the needs of the
householder rather than the hermit.
Nine Gates

Before starting on these eighteen chapters we shall briefly explore the


history of The Gita. After these eighteen chapters, we shall discuss the impact of
The Gita on Arjuna.
Writing My Gita helped me expand my mind. I discovered more frameworks
through which I could make better sense of reality. I hope reading this book
informs your Gita and helps you expand your mind. Should the urge to find a
fixed single objective truth grip you, remind yourself:

Within infinite myths lies an eternal truth


Who sees it all?
Varuna has but a thousand eyes
Indra, a hundred
You and I, only two.
Before My Gita: A Brief History of The Gita

B efore the Bhagavad Gita, or God’s song, there was the Vyadha Gita, or
the butcher’s song.

Vyadha Gita

The Vyadha Gita is found earlier in the Vana Parva, Book 3 of the
Mahabharata, when the Pandavas are still in exile in the forest, having lost their
kingdom to the Kauravas in a gambling match. The Bhagavad Gita is found in
Bhisma Parva, Book 6 of the Mahabharata, just before the war between the
Pandavas and the Kauravas.
In the forest, the Pandavas encounter the sage Markandeya, who tells them
the story of a hermit who would burn birds alive with a fiery glance of his eye, if
they accidentally dropped excrement on him while he was meditating. When the
hermit threatened to curse a housewife because she kept him waiting for alms
while attending to her household chores, she admonished him for his impatience,
and advised him to go to learn the secret of the Vedas from a butcher in Mithila.
The butcher’s long discourse—the Vyadha Gita—on dharma, karma and atma so
moved the hermit that he returned to his home to serve his old parents, whom he
had abandoned long ago.
In both the Vyadha Gita and the Bhagavad Gita, the discourse takes place in
a violent space: a butcher’s shop and a battlefield, respectively. In both, there is
a separation of the physical (prakriti) and the psychological (purusha), which is
the hallmark of Vedic wisdom. In both, the householder’s way of engagement is
valued over the hermit’s way of withdrawal.
What distinguishes the Bhagavad Gita is that it talks explicitly about God
(bhagavan) and devotion (bhakti). It marks the transition of the old ritual-based
Vedic Hinduism into the new narrative-based Puranic Hinduism.

Approaches to Hindu History

The history of Hinduism spreads over 5,000 years and can be seen in eight
phases that telescope into each other. The first is the Indus phase, then come the
Vedic phase, the Upanishadic phase, the Buddhist phase, the Puranic phase, the
Bhakti phase, the Orientalist phase and finally the modern phase. Relics from the
Indus–Saraswati civilization reveal ancient iconography that is considered sacred
in Hinduism even today. But much of the knowledge of that period remains
speculative. The subsequent three phases constitute Vedic Hinduism, when there
were no temples and the idea of God was rather abstract. The final four phases
constitute Puranic Hinduism, characterized by the rise of temples and belief in a
personal god, either Shiva, or one of his sons; Vishnu, or one of his avatars; or
the Goddess, in her many local forms. We can go so far as to call Vedic
Hinduism pre-Gita Hinduism and Puranic Hinduism post-Gita, to indicate the
pivotal role of The Gita in Hindu history.
The Vedic phase began 4,000 years ago, the Upanishadic phase 3,000 years
ago, the Buddhist phase 2,500 years ago, the Puranic phase 2,000 years ago, the
Bhakti phase 1,000 years ago and the Orientalist phase only 200 years ago. The
modern phase is just emerging, with Indians questioning the understanding of
Hinduism that has so far been based on Western frameworks.
Dating of Hindu history is always approximate and speculative, and often a
range, as orally transmitted scriptures precede the written works by several
centuries, and parts of the written work were composed by various scribes over
several generations, in different geographies. Everything is complicated by the
fact that writing became popular in India only 2,300 years ago, after Mauryan
Emperor Ashoka popularized the Brahmi script through his edicts.

Hindu History

Before we proceed, we must keep in mind that the historical approach to


Hinduism is not acceptable to all Hindus. The ahistorical school of thought sees
all Hindu ideas as timeless. The rather chauvinistic proto-historical school sees
all Hindu rituals, stories and symbols, Vedic or Puranic, as having been created
simultaneously over 5,000 years ago. These have become political issues, which
influence scholarship.
History seeks to be everyone’s truth, but is limited by available facts. More
often than not, what is passed off as history is mythology, someone’s
understanding of truth shaped by memory, feelings and desire, available facts
notwithstanding. However, it is never fantasy, or no one’s truth.

Historical, Proto-historical and Ahistorical Schools

We must also guard against a masculine view of history based on conflict


and triumph alone: natives versus colonizers, polytheism versus monotheism,
Hindus versus Buddhists, Christians versus Muslims, Shias versus Sunnis,
Shaivites versus Vaishnavites, Protestants versus Catholics, Mughals versus
Marathas, democracy versus monarchy, theists versus atheists, capitalists versus
socialists, liberals versus conservatives. This has been popularized by Western
academics and their love for the Hegelian dialectic, where thesis creates
antithesis until there is resolution and a new thesis. This approach assumes that
history has a natural direction and purpose.
An alternate, feminine view of history looks at every event as the fruit of the
past (karma-phala) as well as the seed of future tendencies (karma-bija), without
the need to play judge. Thus, we can see the writing of the Gitas as a response to,
not an attack on, Buddhist monasticism, and the feminization of Buddhism as a
response to, not an appropriation of, the idea of the Goddess found in Hindu
Puranas. No idea emerges from a vacuum. Different ideas amplify from time to
time. Old ideas coexist with new ones. Contradictory ideas influence each other.
Here the world has no beginning, no end, no value, no purpose. All meaning is
created by humans, individually and collectively: the boundaries we establish
and fight over.

Masculine and Feminine Approaches to History

In most parts of the world, a new idea suppresses and wipes out the old idea,
but in India, thanks to the abstract nature of Vedic ideas, new worldviews—be
they native ones like Buddhism or Bhakti or foreign ones like Islam and
Christianity—simply helped reaffirm the Vedic way in different ways. The same
idea manifests as 4,000-year-old Vedic rituals, 2,000-year-old stories, 1,000-
year-old temple art and architecture and 500-year-old devotional poetry.
This resilience of the Vedic way led to the Vedas being described in later
texts, such as the Brahma-sutras, as being of non-human origin (a-paurusheya).
This means Vedic ideas are not artificial: they are a reflection of nature (prakriti)
as it is. It is common, however, to glamorize the Vedas by claiming them to be
superhuman or supernatural.
Veda essentially refers to a set of hymns, melodies and rituals put together
nearly 4,000 years ago that symbolically and metaphorically communicate
knowledge (vidya)—observations of seers (rishis), people who saw what others
did not, would not, could not see. The Upanishads speculated on these ideas
while Buddhism and other monastic orders challenged the rituals inspired by
these ideas. These inform The Gita. The ideas in The Gita were illustrated and
often elaborated in the Puranas, including the great epics, the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata. These were simplified during the Bhakti period and communicated
in regional languages. They were expressed in English from the eighteenth
century onwards. That is why any study of The Gita has to take into
consideration Vedic, Upanishadic, Buddhist, Puranic, Bhakti and Orientalist
ideas.

Influence, Illustration and Elaboration

Gitas and the Reframing of Hinduism

Two thousand years ago, South Asia was torn between two extremes. On one
side were kings who established great empires, such as those of the Nandas,
Mauryas, Sungas, Kanvas, Satavahanas, Kushanas and Guptas, which heralded
great prosperity but also involved great violence. On the other side were hermits
(shramanas) such as the Jains, the Ajivikas and the Buddhists, who spoke of the
household as the place of suffering and sought solace in the solitude offered by
monasteries (viharas). More and more people, including kings, were choosing
the hermit’s way of life over marriage, family vocation and family
responsibilities, causing great alarm. Chandragupta Maurya embraced Jainism.
His grandson, Ashoka, embraced Buddhism.
For 2,000 years before this, society was dominated by Vedic lore. At the
heart of the Veda was the ritual called yagna, which involved exchange, giving
in order to get, thus establishing a relationship between the yajamana, who
initiated the ritual and the other—family, friends, strangers, ancestors, gods,
nature and cosmos. It was all about the household.

Tension Between Hermit and Householder

There were hermits in these Vedic times too: the rishis, who were married
but chose philosophical exploration over material ambitions; the sanyasis, who
had chosen to renounce the household after completing all household duties; and
the tapasvis, who chose to be celibate in the pursuit of occult powers (siddhi).
The Vedas presented a world where there was no conflict between the
householder’s way and hermit’s way, as in the legendary kingdom of Mithila
ruled by Janaka.
Vedic ideas were transmitted via the hymns of the Rig Veda, melodies of the
Sama Veda, rituals of the Yajur Veda and even the spells of the Atharva Veda.
The idea of including the Atharva Veda in the list of Vedas is a much later
phenomenon. Still later, the epic Mahabharata and even the Natya Shastra—that
discusses art and aesthetics—came to be seen as the fifth Veda.
Vedic transmission is highly symbolic, with the onus of transmitting the
ideas resting on priests (brahmanas, or Brahmins) and the onus of decoding them
resting on the patron (yajamana). As the centuries passed, as society grew in size
and complexity, as economic and political realities shifted, as tribes and clans
gave way to villages with multiple communities, which gave rise to kingdoms
and later empires, the transmission began to fail. The transmitters of Vedic lore,
the Brahmins, assumed the role of decoders. In other words, the librarian became
the professor! Consequently, hymns and rituals stopped being seen as symbolic
puzzles that when deciphered unravelled the mysteries of the world. Instead,
they became magical tools to attract fortune and ward off misfortune.
This trend towards materialism over self-enquiry may have contributed to
the rise of the shramanas, who were known for their disdain of Brahmins and
Brahmanic rituals. The need for reframing Vedic ideas was felt even within the
Vedic fold.
The reframing of Hinduism happened rather organically over a period of
another 1,000 years. No authority spearheaded it. Sages began communicating
Vedic ideas choosing stories as their vehicle, instead of rituals and hymns. The
stories were based on traditional accounts of events, both experienced and
imagined. These were ‘open source’ narratives, with plots and counter-plots
gradually turning into pieces of a complex jigsaw. Everyone worked
anonymously and attributed their work to one Vyasa, who was the son of a
fisherwoman. He was also credited with reorganizing the lost Vedas. The word
‘vyasa’ means compiler: compiler of Vedic knowledge, as well as compiler of
Puranic stories.

Transmission of the Veda

The narratives by ‘Vyasa’ were called the Puranas, or chronicles, which


included the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata that spoke of family quarrels
over property. They were also called Itihasa. Itihasa, taken literally, means
stories from the past. Itihasa, taken symbolically, means stories that will always
be true: past, present or future. They reiterated the concept of ‘iti’, which means
‘as things are’—accepting the reality of sex and violence, desires and conflicts in
relationships, household and life.
Those who affirmed iti were the astikas. Those who denied iti were the
nastikas. Later, as Hinduism turned more theistic, iti denoted faith in God, and
so astikas and nastikas would come to mean believers and non-believers.
Unlike monastic orders of Buddhism, which spoke of withdrawal and
renunciation, these narratives spoke of liberation despite engaging with society
and upholding responsibilities. Household quarrels and property disputes were
always resolved using Vedic wisdom presented in the form of conversations.
Often, the conversations were turned into Gitas, made lyrical using the anushtup
metre, where each verse has four sentences and each sentence has eight
syllables.
The Mahabharata itself has many Gitas, besides the butcher’s song and
God’s song. In the Shanti Parva, Book 12 of the Mahabharata, Bhisma reveals
nine Gitas to the Pandavas: the prostitute’s song (Pingala Gita), the priest’s song
(Sampaka Gita), the farmer’s song (Manki Gita), the ascetic’s song (Bodhya
Gita), the king’s song (Vichaknu Gita), the retired man’s song (Harita Gita), the
demon’s song (Vritra Gita), the philosopher’s song (Parasara Gita) and the
swan’s song (Hansa Gita). Outside the Mahabharata, there are the Ashtavakra
Gita, Vasishtha Gita, Ram Gita, Shiva Gita, Devi Gita, Ganesha Gita and many
more.

Locating The Gita in a Sea of Scriptures

The Bhagavad Gita, of course, remains the most widely read of the Gitas. It
is the counsel of a chariot-driver called Krishna to the chariot-rider and archer,
Arjuna, just before the start of a war at Kuru-kshetra between the five Pandava
brothers and their hundred Kaurava cousins. It is so popular that today, when we
say Gita, we mean the Bhagavad Gita.
In its final form, the Bhagavad Gita had 700 verses, split into 18 chapters, of
which 574 are spoken by Krishna, 84 by Arjuna, 41 by Sanjaya and 1 by
Dhritarashtra. There are suggestions that the Bhagavad Gita originally had 745
verses. It is a conversation, though it does seem like a discourse, which takes
place over ninety minutes while fully armed soldiers on either side wait
impatiently to do battle. Whether this event is a time-bound physical objective
truth (history) or a timeless psychological subjective truth (mythology) remains a
matter of opinion.

Commentaries, Retellings, Translations

Interpretations of The Gita started appearing nearly five centuries after its final
composition. The reason for this gap remains a mystery. The Vedic idea was
widely prevalent, but no special attention was given to this particular
conversation in the Mahabharata between Krishna and Arjuna.
Commentaries on The Gita start appearing from approximately the time
Islam entered India. One of the world’s oldest mosques was built on the Malabar
coast in the seventh century, and Adi Shankara, who wrote the first elaborate
commentary on The Gita and made it an important scripture for Vedanta, was
also born in the Malabar coast region in the eighth century. A relationship cannot
be denied. Whether this was pure coincidence or the cause for the resurgence of
The Gita remains a matter of speculation, mired in contemporary politics.
With Islam, India was exposed to Abrahamic mythology: the idea of one
formless God, one holy book, one set of rules and one way of thinking that
included a violent rejection of hierarchy as well as idolatry. Christian and Jewish
traders had introduced many of these ideas before, but nothing on the Islamic
scale. As many Muslims settled in India, as many kingdoms came to be ruled by
Muslims, as many Indian communities converted to Islam, they were bound to
influence Hindu thought. However, the extent of Islamic influence provokes
fierce debate.
The Gita readings took place in five waves spread over 1,200 years.
The first wave involved Sanskrit ‘commentaries’ (bhasyas) by Vedanta
scholars, the most celebrated of whom were Adi Shankara from Kerala in the
eighth century followed by Ramanuja from Tamil Nadu in the eleventh century
and Madhva Acharya from Karnataka in the thirteenth century. They were
concerned about the nature of God, and the relationship of divinity and
humanity. Was God within or without? Was God embodied (sa-guna) or
formless (nir-guna)? Their language was highly intellectual. What is significant
is that all three commentators were celibate monks, who either did not marry or
gave up marriage and established Hindu monastic orders (mathas), suggesting
very clearly that Hinduism, once champion of the householder’s way, had ended
up mimicking the hermit’s way of Buddhism it had previously always mocked.
It contributed to the gradual separation of the more intellectual Vedanta from the
more sensory Tantra, with the former becoming more mainstream and the latter
being seen more as the occult.
The second wave involved ‘retellings’ in regional languages, the earliest of
which was in Marathi by Gyaneshwara (thirteenth century), followed by the
works of Niranam Madhava Panikkar in Malayalam (fourteenth century), Peda
Tirumalacharya in Telugu (fifteenth century), Balarama Das in Odiya (fifteenth
century), Govind Mishra in Assamese (sixteenth century), Dasopant Digambara
and Tukaram in Marathi (seventeenth century) and many more. The tone in these
regional works was extremely emotional, with the poets speaking of God in
extremely personal and affectionate terms. Gyaneshwara even refers to Krishna
as 'mother', and visualizes him as a cow that comforts the frightened calf,
Arjuna, with the milk that is The Gita. It is through works such as these, usually
presented as songs, that the wisdom of The Gita reached the masses. It is in this
phase that the Bhagavad Purana, or simply Bhagavata, which describes the
earlier life of Krishna as a cowherd, became the dominant text of Hinduism. It is
also during this phase that The Gita started being personified as a goddess, and
hymns were composed to meditate on her (Gita Dhyana) and celebrate her glory
(Gita Mahatmya). Gita Jayanti, the eleventh day of the waxing moon in the
month of Margashisha (December), was identified as the day when Krishna
revealed this wisdom to Arjuna, and the world.
Gyaneshwara

The third wave involved ‘translations’ by Europeans— eighteenth-century


European Orientalists such as Charles Wilkins, who was sponsored by the East
India Company, and nineteenth-century poets such as Edwin Arnold, who also
introduced the Buddha and many things Eastern to Europe. They sought an
objective, hence correct, reading of The Gita, implicitly introducing the
suggestion that commentaries and retellings and poetic renditions were mere
interpretations—subjective, contaminated by artistic liberty, hence inferior. The
translators were Christian and, like Muslims, immersed in Abrahamic
monotheistic mythology, who saw God as the primary source of knowledge and
humans as sinners who needed to follow the way of God. Naturally, they saw
The Gita’s God as judge, even though such a concept was alien to Hinduism.
The Gita naturally became a directive from God, a Hindu Bible! These
translations, and the meanings given by Orientalists to Sanskrit words, with
assumptions rooted in Abrahamic mythology, continue to be subscribed to and
have a profound impact on the understanding of The Gita in modern times.
The fourth wave involved ‘re-translations’ by Indian nationalists. The Indian
National Movement gained momentum in the early part of the twentieth century,
and there was an increased urgency to bind the diverse peoples of the Indian
subcontinent into a single narrative. The Gita seemed like a good book to do so.
But different leaders saw it differently. Sri Aurobindo found in The Gita
mystical ideas of an ancient civilization, while B.R. Ambedkar pointed out that
The Gita seemed to justify the draconian caste system. Bal Gangadhar Tilak
found the rationale for righteous violence in it, while Mahatma Gandhi found
inspiration for the path of non-violence. This was the period that the world was
introduced to the words of the Buddha that were compared with the words of
Krishna. Eventually, Arjuna’s dilemma was radically re-articulated: it became
less about ‘how can I kill family?’ and more about ‘how can I kill?’
The fifth wave involved ‘reframing’ following the end of the two World
Wars that replaced colonial empires with republics and democratic nation states.
The world, traumatized by violence, was confused as to how to interpret The
Gita. J. Robert Oppenheimer infamously equated the nuclear bomb with
Krishna’s cosmic form. Aldous Huxley saw The Gita as part of the perennial
philosophy that bound all humanity. It became the definitive holy book of the
Hindus that spoke of peace. Spiritual gurus started projecting The Gita as a
directive from God with a well-defined goal of liberation (moksha) and turned
Hinduism into a ‘religion’. Management gurus used The Gita to explain
leadership, ethics, governance and the art of winning. By the 1980s, before the
Internet explosion, there were an estimated 3,000 translations of The Gita in
almost fifty languages, and nearly a thousand in English.
Some American academicians, in recent times, have challenged the notion
that The Gita has anything to do with peace. They tend to project Hinduism as
the outcome of an oppressive violent force called Brahminism that sought to
wipe out Buddhist pacifism and propagate a hierarchical system that promoted
patriarchy and untouchability. The Gita then becomes a complex justification of
violence. Any attempt to challenge this view is dismissed as religious
fundamentalism or Hindu nationalism. Such a naïve, or perhaps deliberate,
force-fitting of Hinduism into the conflict-based masculine historical template,
long favoured in the West, is increasingly being condemned as Hindu-phobia,
especially by the Hindu diaspora. Increasingly, historians are drawing attention
to the deep prejudice and cultural context of many South Asian scholars, as well
as nationalists, that influence the way they make sense of facts.
To eyes that can see, each of these waves is a response to a historical
context, be it the amplification of Hindu theism in the Buddhist and Islamic
periods or the transformation of India into a British colony or the rise of the
national movement or the end of empires, the rise of secular democracies with
atheistic ideologies or an increasingly digitized global village having an identity
crisis, where everyone seems to be tired of violence but no one seems to be able
to give it up.
You and I live in unique times. We have access to the history of The Gita, its
creation and its transformation over time. We have a better understanding of
geography, of history, of different mythologies and philosophies from around the
world, with which we can compare and contrast ideas of The Gita. We have
access to research on animal, human and developmental psychology. We are
also aware that any study of The Gita eventually becomes a study of how
humans see the world, how Indians saw the world, how the West wants to see
India, how India wants to see India and how we want to see The Gita.
Rather than seeking a singular authentic message, you and I must appreciate
the plurality of ideas that have emerged over the centuries and seek out what
binds them, and what separates them. In the various translations, commentaries
and retellings, we do find a common tendency to appreciate the relationship
between the self (Arjuna) and the other; those who stand on our side (Pandavas);
those who stand on the other (Kauravas); the one who stands on everybody’s
side (Krishna); and of course, property (Kuru-kshetra). Our relationship with the
other, be it a thing or an organism, and the other's relationship with us, is what
determines our humanity. And this is a timeless (sanatana) truth (satya), a
discovery of our ancestors, which we will explore in My Gita.
My Gita

Vishwa-rupa

In the following chapters, you and I will explore eighteen themes of The Gita.
We will continuously journey between the outer world of relationships and the
inner world of thoughts and emotions. We will begin by appreciating how we
look at the world and ourselves (darshan). Then we will understand the
architecture of the world we inhabit, composed of the tangible and the
intangible, both within and around us (atma, deha, dehi, karma). After that, we
will see how humans can socially connect (dharma, yagna, yoga). Then we will
appreciate the idea of God (deva, bhagavan, brahmana, avatara), located in all of
us, that helps us cope with our fears that disconnect us from society. Lack of
faith in the divine within makes us seek solace outside, in property (kshetra,
maya). Because of this, a tug-of-war ensues between the inside and the outside.
As long as we cling (moha), we are trapped. As soon as we let go, we are
liberated (moksha). We become independent and content in our own company
(atma-rati) yet generous and dependable for the other (brahma-nirvana).
The sequence of themes in My Gita is slightly different from the sequence of
themes in The Gita as some concepts have been elaborated to facilitate
understanding.
The Architecture of My Gita
1.
You and I do not have to judge

Hindu mythology does not have the concept of Judgement Day (or qayamat in
Arabic). The God of Hinduism is no judge. Hence, Krishna gives no
commandments in The Gita. He simply explains the architecture of the world.
As long as we judge, we cannot see the world for what it is; we are simply
spellbound by the boundaries that we build separating those whom we consider
family from those whom we consider enemy, as we realize in Chapter 1 of The
Gita. This chapter introduces the concept of darshan, or observing, that is
implicit in the Vedas and The Gita and the Mahabharata, but becomes an explicit
ritual in temples of Puranic Hinduism where devotees are invited to gaze upon
the enshrined deity, and the deity looks back at them, without a blink.

The Gita begins with how Dhritarashtra, Duryodhana and Arjuna view the same
battlefield. Below is what Dhritarashtra says in the very first verse of The Gita. It
is the only verse he speaks:

Sanjaya, tell me what is going on between my sons and Pandu’s sons, as


they gather in Kuru-kshetra, where they have to do what they are
supposed to do?—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 1, Verse 1 (paraphrased).

Dhritarashtra is the head of the Kuru family, whose two branches are about
to clash on the battlefield. Naturally, he is curious about what is going on there.
He is also concerned whether the right thing is being done there, for he refers to
Kuru-kshetra as dharma-kshetra. However, he refers only to his sons, the
Kauravas, as mine (mama) and his nephews simply as the Pandavas, the sons of
Pandu, not as ‘my brother’s sons’. Thus, he expresses his exclusion of the
Pandavas from his heart: he sees them not as family but as outsiders, intruders,
even enemies. He does not realize that this exclusion is the root of the adharma
that is the undoing of the Kuru clan. Dhritarashtra’s blindness is not so much the
absence of sight as the absence of empathy.
Dhritarashtra’s blindness extends to his eldest son, Duryodhana, whose
conduct on the battlefield is then described by the royal charioteer Sanjaya.

King, your son is not surprised that the enemy is well-prepared; after all,
their commander, Dhristadhyumna, is also the student of his tutor,
Drona. He declares that the Pandavas may have the mighty Bhima
leading a limited army, but he has the veteran and the invincible Bhisma
on his side leading his limitless army. Having said so, he orders his
soldiers to guard Bhisma at all costs.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 1,
verses 2 to 11 (paraphrased).

Duryodhana’s words as described by Sanjaya reveal irritation, insecurity and


agitation, despite the fact that he has eleven armies, and the Pandavas only
seven.

Sanjaya
Sanjaya then proceeds to describe Arjuna’s entry into the battlefield. Arjuna
looks confident, bow in hand, on his chariot drawn by four white horses, with
the image of Hanuman, the mighty monkey god, on the flag fluttering above. He
asks his charioteer, Krishna, to take him to the centre of the battleground in the
space between the two armies. There, in no man’s land, the enormity of the
unfolding tragedy dawns upon him: on either side are family and friends. Elders,
teachers, uncles, nephews, sons-in-law, fathers-in-law. Before him are those he
should be protecting, and those who should be protecting him. Instead, they are
planning to kill him, and he them. Why? For a piece of land! How can that be
right, or good? What impact would it have on civilization?

Krishna, Dhritarashtra’s sons are family. How can we slaughter them,


they whose greed blinds them to the horror of the situation? If we kill
family over property, why will women bother with fidelity, why will
communities respect boundaries? All rituals will be abandoned and all
ancestors will be forgotten. Those who unravel the fabric of family will
surely sink into hell.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 1, verses 37 to 45
(paraphrased).

This response, full of fear and confusion, is very different from the views of
Dhritrashtra and Duryodhana. The Kaurava father and son have clearly drawn
boundaries dividing those they consider their own and those they consider as
outsiders, intruders, even enemies. Arjuna’s boundaries, however, wobble: how
can family be enemy?
The Mahabharata describes Arjuna as a highly focussed archer, who could
shoot his arrow into the eye of a flying bird without being distracted by the
clouds above, or the trees below. Yet, at Kuru-kshetra, Arjuna looks beyond the
target and ‘sees’ family and friends. He questions the morality of his wanting to
kill them, and the consequences of such violence on society as a whole. It is not
the violence that bothers him; he has killed before. What bothers him is violence
against family, those he is meant to protect.
Observing Kuru-kshetra

Here is the very reverse of the psychological blindness displayed by


Dhritarashtra and Duryodhana: Arjuna’s vision is expanding, focus is giving
way to perspective, attention (dhayana) to awareness (dharana) as his gaze
finally rejects the boundary separating the self from the other, and action from
responsibility. This is darshan!

Focus and Perspective

In darshan, there is no judgement because there are no boundaries, no rules,


no separation of right and wrong, mine and not mine.
Dhritarashtra is unable to do darshan because of memories (smriti); he bears
a deep grudge. He was born blind, yet it was he who was never seen. Not by his
uncle, Bhisma, who decided that Dhritarashtra’s younger brother, Pandu, should
be made king instead of him. Not by his wife, Gandhari, who decided to share
his blindness by wearing a blindfold, rather than compensate for it. Not by his
beloved son, Duryodhana, who preferred the advice of his maternal uncle,
Shakuni, to his own. Not by his advisor, Vidura, who always praised Pandu’s
five sons, but never his hundred. Unseen by all, he is simply paying the
blindness forward.
Arjuna also has many reasons not to do darshan: the Kauravas tried their
best to kill him and his brothers when they were children; they humiliated him
and his brothers repeatedly in a gambling hall; they dragged the Pandavas’
common wife, Draupadi, by the hair and attempted to disrobe her in public; they
refused to return Indra-prastha, the Pandava lands, even though the Pandavas
had kept their side of their agreement and spent thirteen years in exile; the
Kauravas even refused offers of compromise for the sake of peace. Yet, Arjuna
finds it hard to respond to the Kauravas’ blindness with blindness.

Memories Distort Observation

In an attempt to goad Arjuna into action, Krishna reminds him of the


sufferings of his brothers and his wife and of his duties as a warrior, a brother
and a husband. Krishna even questions Arjuna’s manliness (Chapter 2, Verse 3)
when he mocks his action as those of a non-man (kliba). He speaks of the glory
of paradise that awaits him if he dies, and the satisfaction of victory that awaits
him if he lives. But none of these have any impact on Arjuna. He refuses to let
memories strip him of empathy. He does darshan and that makes him a worthy
recipient of The Gita.
Long before the war, when negotiations for peace had broken down, Krishna
had revealed his cosmic form (virat-swarup)—the same form he shows Arjuna
during the course of his discourse— to both Dhritarashtra and Duryodhana,
perhaps to impress upon father and son that his words needed to be taken
seriously. But Dhritarashtra, granted momentary sight, had simply declared his
helplessness before such awesomeness and shrunk back into blindness, while
Duryodhana had seen it as a magician’s trick. Both father and son refused to see
what was shown. They clung to the view that they were the victims. Thus,
showing does not guarantee seeing. Telling does not guarantee hearing. Gyana is
not vi-gyana.
In judgement, the world is divided: good and bad, innocent and guilty,
polluted and pure, oppressor and oppressed, privileged and unprivileged,
powerful and powerless. In darshan, one sees a fluid world of cause and
consequence, where there are no divisions, boundaries, hierarchies or rules.

Rana-bhoomi and Ranga-bhoomi

A world created based on judgement evokes rage. Life becomes a


battleground (rana-bhoomi) like Kuru-kshetra, where both sides feel like
victims, where everyone wants to win at all costs, where someone will always
lose. A world created by observation evokes insight, hence affection, for we see
the hunger and fear of all beings. Life becomes a performance on a stage (ranga-
bhoomi) aimed to nourish and comfort the other, while deriving nourishment and
comfort from their delight. Krishna’s performance (leela) leads to him being
worshipped as Ranga-natha, lord of the stage. He never judges, so he sees no one
as a victim. This is how he begins The Gita:

Arjuna, you grieve for those whom you should not feel sorry for, and
you argue as if you are a man of wisdom. But the wise grieve for no one:
neither the living, nor the dead.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 11
(paraphrased).

Do you see me as hero, villain or victim? If yes, then you are not doing
darshan. If you can empathize with the fears that make people heroes,
villains and victims, then you are doing darshan. For then you look
beyond the boundaries that separate you from the rest.
2.
You and I have been here before

Our body is mortal and so it seeks security and creates boundaries. But within
this body is the immortal atma that does not seek security and so, does not care
for boundaries. Wrapped in mortal flesh, it experiences life and death, again and
again. By introducing the idea of immortality and rebirth in Chapter 2 of The
Gita, Krishna changes the scope of the discussion, for without death serving as a
boundary, there is no fear, no yearning for food or meaning, nowhere to come
from, or go to, for the end is no longer the end and the beginning is no longer the
beginning. Rather than change the world that defies control, rather than seek
validation from things temporary, we engage, observe, discover and enjoy.

Arjuna, the wise know that you and I and the rest existed before this
event, and will continue to exist after this event. The resident of this
body experiences its childhood, youth and old age before moving on to
the next. This body gets attached to the world around it, and so fears
death. But the wise, aware of the inner resident’s immortality, aware that
the flesh goes through cycles of birth and death, do not fear change, or
death. They know that what matters is the immortal, not the mortal.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, verses 12 to 16 (paraphrased).

With these words Krishna simply renders death irrelevant. He transforms the
battlefield into one of the infinite experiences of the immortal resident (dehi) of
the mortal body (deha). Later, he identifies dehi as atma, purusha, brahmana and
kshetragna. It inhabits various bodies, again and again, lifetime after lifetime.
This means that this is not the first time we have experienced the world, and it
will not be the last. We have been here before and will return again. Our birth is
a rebirth. Our death is a re-death.

Arjuna, you wear fresh clothes at the time of birth and discard them at
the time of death. You are not these clothes.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter
2, Verse 22 (paraphrased).

In Chapter 4, Krishna declares he has transmitted this knowledge before, to


the sun or Vivasvat (the first celestial being), then to Manu (the first man), and
then to Ikshvaku (the first king), and that this knowledge is often forgotten.

Krishna, Vivasvat lived long ago. You live now. How could you have
taught him?—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 4 (paraphrased).

Arjuna is naturally startled. Krishna responds by revealing that he has lived


before, as has Arjuna; he remembers it, but Arjuna does not, for Arjuna is
trapped in the outer world of tangible objects and has no insight into the inner
world of intangible thoughts.

Arjuna, at the dawn of Brahma’s day, all forms burst forth. At dusk, they
withdraw into formlessness. The children of Brahma stay entrapped in
the wheel of rebirths as their mind is drawn by their senses. But those
who fix their minds on me break free from this wheel of rebirths, of
fluctuating between form and formlessness.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter
8, verses 16 to 26 (paraphrased).

The idea of rebirth forms the cornerstone of Hindu thought. It is also the
mainstay of Buddhist and Jain philosophies. But there are differences. Buddhists
do not believe in the existence of the immortal resident (atma), and Jains do not
believe in the concept of God (param-atma), but they both agree on the concept
of rebirth (punar-janma). In Jainism and Buddhism, the world of rebirths is
called samsara, propelled by action (karma) and memories of past actions
(samskara). These are sometimes referred to as dharma mythologies,
distinguishing them from Abrahamic or non-dharma mythologies such as
Judaism, Christianity and Islam that believe in only one life, and an afterlife in
heaven or hell. Science endorses only one life, as the afterlife or rebirth defies
scientific measurement.

Dharma and Non-dharma Mythologies

The idea of rebirth can be seen at metaphysical, social and psychological


levels. Together they change our view of life.
At a metaphysical level, rebirth helps us explain the inexplicable, and
replace conflict with acceptance and peace. Why are some people born into rich
families and some into poor families, some to loving parents and some to cruel
parents, some with talent and some without? Who is to be blamed?
In Abrahamic mythology, the explanation of everything is God’s will. Our
sufferings are the result of disobeying God’s will and law, having fallen under
the spell of the Devil. All will be well if we repent of our sins, accept God’s love
and demonstrate it by following His law. This assumption fuels guilt.
In Greek mythology, wealth and power are seen as having been cornered by
the privileged few, and heroes have to fight these oppressors, bring justice and
offer equal opportunities to all. This assumption fuels rage.
Science offers no explanation, as science is not about ‘why’, but about
‘how’. For the why, the social sciences invariably turn to Greek mythology with
its oppressor-oppression framework that resurrected after the European
Renaissance, 600 years ago. Or it creates a new god: the people.
In Hindu mythology, there is no one but ourselves to blame for our
problems: neither God nor any oppressors. The idea of rebirth aims to evoke
acceptance of the present, and responsibility for the future. Our immortal soul is
tossed from one life to another as long as our mind refuses to do darshan. This is
made most explicit in the story of Karna in the Mahabharata.

My Action, My Circumstance

Karna is a foundling brought up by a charioteer, who rises to be a king


through sheer talent and effort, and discovers much later in life that he is of royal
blood, abandoned at birth by his mother Kunti, who went on to marry King
Pandu. Kunti’s children are none other than the Pandavas, who constantly mock
his lowly status and who are the enemies of his benefactor and best friend,
Duryodhana. Before the war, Karna has the option to switch to the opposite side,
where as the eldest of the Pandavas, he would become the rightful heir to Pandu
and the first of Draupadi’s husbands. But Karna chooses to stay loyal to the
Kauravas. During the war at Kuru-kshetra, everyone and everything turns
against him. First, Bhisma does not let him fight as long as he is alive. Then
Drona makes him use his best weapons prematurely. Arjuna’s celestial father,
the rain god Indra, tricks him into giving up his invulnerable armour, taking
advantage of his charitable nature. To mock the Pandavas, Duryodhana gets their
uncle, Shalya, to serve as Karna’s charioteer, but that turns out to be a terrible
decision as Shalya spends all his time praising Arjuna and demotivating Karna.
When the wheel of Karna’s chariot gets stuck in the ground, Shalya refuses to
pull it out, claiming he is a king, not a charioteer. The mantra taught by
Parashurama to release wheels stuck in the ground does not work. So Karna
throws down his bow and tries to pull the wheel out himself, and in that
unarmed, helpless moment, goaded by Krishna, Arjuna strikes him dead. Karna,
who sought all his life to be an archer and a king, thus dies as a charioteer, the
profession of his foster father that he shunned.
Karna’s story is a tragic one. Though technically an insider, circumstances
make him an outsider, who is never ever allowed into the family. He is used and
exploited by all, not just the Kauravas, but also his birth mother, Kunti, who
comes to him only at the brink of war and tries to take advantage of his
charitable nature. Even Krishna tries to tempt him away from his friend and
benefactor, Duryodhana. Despite his charity, his integrity and his loyalty, he
suffers all his life. We see him as a victim, but Krishna does not. For Krishna
knows his previous lives.
In one story, Karna was an asura blessed with a thousand armours called
Sahasrakavacha. To destroy each armour, a warrior had to acquire special
powers by meditating for a thousand years. Even with these powers, destroying
the armour would need a thousand years. So Nara and Narayana, twin sages,
avatars of Vishnu, attacked this asura simultaneously—while one meditated, the
other fought, taking turns to acquire the power and to destroy the armour. By the
time they had destroyed all but one of the thousand armours, the world came to
an end. But the world was reborn; the asura was reborn as Karna, Nara as Arjuna
and Narayana as Krishna. We are told that only Krishna knows the full story and
so, while Karna is a victim if we know only his present story, he becomes a
villain if we know another backstory.
In another story, when Vishnu descended on earth as Ram, he killed Vali,
the son of Indra, and sided with Sugriva, the son of Surya. So when Vishnu
descended as Krishna, he was obliged to restore the balance in the cosmos by
killing Karna, son of Surya, and siding with Arjuna, son of Indra. Here, one
story is one half of another story, and Karna’s misfortune neutralizes his fortune
in another life. Free of any obligations or expectations, he would thus be
liberated from the wheel of rebirths. So his killing, which we feel is a sad
incident, becomes a wonderful event.
In a third story, when Vishnu descended as Parashurama, he trained Bhisma,
Drona and Karna, who ended up siding with the Kauravas and upholding
adharma. Since he could not kill his own students, Vishnu again descended as
Krishna, and supported the Pandavas, who fought and killed the Kauravas and
their commanders. Here Krishna is reborn to correct the errors of a previous life,
one of them being Karna.
In the Puranas, stories of past lives are continuously used to counter
assumptions of another story. It reminds us that our story is part of a grand
jigsaw puzzle. We are part of a larger narrative. Stories of the past impact stories
of the present that impact stories of the future. We may not know these stories,
but we have played roles in them. We must not assume that the story we
encounter, experience or remember is the only story in the world. Our lives are
the outcomes of roles performed in other stories. Even if we don’t remember
those stories or those roles, we cannot escape their consequences.
‘Arjuna, when I take form, particles of myself form the various beings in
this world and I draw the mind and the senses to me. It is I who
experience the world through the senses. When I lose form, I carry
memories of these experiences to the next form, just as the breeze carries
fragrances. The wise see me enjoying and transporting myself so. The
unwise don’t.’—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 15, verses 7 to 10
(paraphrased).

Impact of Past on Present and Present on Future

At a social level, the idea of rebirth expands the canvas of our lives and
brings perspective. It reminds us that the world existed before us and the world
will exist after us. Like us, many people have sought to change the world and
make it better, even perfect, but while changes do take place technologically, no
real change takes place psychologically—people are still jealous and angry and
ambitious and greedy and heartbroken. While the West valorizes social
transformation, The Gita is focussed on individual psychological expansion.
The world into which we are born is imagined as a stage full of actors but
with no script, or director. Everyone assumes they are the hero, but discover they
are not the protagonists of the ongoing play. We are forced to play certain roles
and speak certain dialogues. But we revolt. We want our own script to be
performed and our own dialogues to be heard. So we negotiate with fellow
actors. Some succeed in getting heard with some people, others fail with most
people, no one succeeds with everybody. We cling to our scripts, submit to other
people’s scripts, speak dialogues we do not want to, only to stay relevant and
connected to the larger narrative, or at least to a subplot. Heroes emerge. Villains
emerge. Heroes of one plot turn out to be villains of other plots. Eventually, all
leave the stage but the play continues. Who knows what is actually going on?
Vishnu, the ranga-natha? All we can decipher are the patterns, as does he.
In the Puranas, Vishnu sees the devas and asuras in eternal combat: the
devas feel they are entitled, and the asuras feel they have been tricked; the devas
do not share, and the asuras always scare. The force of the devas and the
counterforce of the asuras, their alternating victories and defeats, keep the world
moving. Vishnu sleeps and awakens, and smiles, turning the unproductive fight
into a productive churn whenever he can, as Brahma and his sons struggle
continuously to control life, rather than accept and enjoy it, despite Vishnu’s
numerous interventions.

Deva, Asura and Vishnu

In the Ramayana, Vishnu encounters Ravana, who refuses to give up Sita,


even if it means the death of his son and his brother, and the burning of his
kingdom. In the Mahabharata, Vishnu encounters Yudhishtira, who gambles
away his kingdom, his brothers, his wife, even his own identity, rather than
simply accept defeat. He encounters Duryodhana, who would rather plunge his
family into a war that will kill millions than give up a ‘needlepoint of land’.
There is pride, jealousy, rage and the rationalization of all desires. These patterns
are neverending, and can be experienced in every society, at all times.
Darshan Breaks the Cycle

The idea that life has no beginning (anadi) and no end (ananta), that our
existence has no borders, no starting or finishing line, stands in direct contrast to
modern ideas based on Greek mythology, where life is like an Olympic race
where we have to ‘win’. The winners of Greek mythology found a place for
themselves in the afterlife, called Elysium. In Abrahamic mythology, those who
align to the will and word of God reach heaven, the rest go to hell. Rebirth takes
away the sense of urgency and the quest for perfection that are the hallmarks of
Western thought. The Gita does not speak of changing the world. It speaks of
appreciating the world that is always changing. Belief in one life makes us want
to change the world, control it or resign to the way things are. Belief in rebirth
enables us to appreciate all three possibilities, without clinging to any.
Taken psychologically, the idea of rebirth is about having multiple
opportunities to break the cycle of fear and find meaning, without ‘consuming’
anyone.
When you live only once, the value of your life becomes the sum total of
your achievements. Hence the need to align or achieve, which are the driving
forces of Western thought. In Christianity and Islam it involves conversion to the
right way of living. In Greek mythology (or secularism), it is about being a hero
by either winning a race, or overthrowing oppressors. In either case, we end up
controlling, hence consuming, the other. This is entrapment.
But when you live many lives, alignments and achievements are rendered
meaningless. What matters is wisdom: an understanding of why this world
exists, why we exist, and why we live, again and again, in a merry-go-round.
When we understand, we do not seek control of the other, hence are liberated.
We engage with the world, but are not entrapped. We are no longer dependent,
but we stay dependable.
Arjuna draws attention to the fact that it is tough to stay aligned to a single
course, howsoever noble.

Krishna, what happens to he who strays from the path of insight? Does
he lose out on both: happiness promised by wisdom and pleasures
promised by indulgence? Does he perish like a torn cloud?—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 6, verses 37 and 38 (paraphrased).

Krishna replies that nothing is wasted or destroyed in the cosmos. All efforts
are recorded and they impact future lives. Knowledge acquired in the past plays
a role in the wisdom of future lives.

Those unsuccessful in realization in this life will be reborn. Their efforts


will not go in waste. They will ensure they are born in a wise family,
where they can strive again. They will be driven to wisdom on account
of memories and impressions of previous lives. By striving through
many lives, they untangle themselves to unite with divinity.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 6, verses 41 to 45 (paraphrased).

In a way Krishna is alluding to Yama, the god of death in the Puranas, who
has an accountant called Chitargupta, who keeps a record of all deeds. This
record determines the circumstances of our future lives: the parents we shall
have, the gender we shall acquire, the fortunes and misfortunes we shall
experience. How we respond to what we carry forward from our previous lives
will determine what we carry forward to our future lives. Escape is possible if
there is nothing to carry forward.

Arjuna, there are two paths, one of return and the other of no return. The
wise, the connected, know the difference and choose the one of no
return.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 8, verses 26 and 27 (paraphrased).

Thus, rebirth offers a second chance. In the Ramayana, Ram’s ancestors, the
sons of Sagara, are burned to death by the fiery glance of the sage called Kapila
because they wrongly accuse him of stealing their horse. Their grandson begs
Indra, who had stolen the horse in the first place, to let the celestial river
Mandakini flow down on earth as the Ganga. Washed by its waters, the sons of
Sagara get the chance of a second life. Another life is another chance: either to
stay entrapped in the cycle of fear, or break free by discovering the architecture
of the world and observing it without judgement. This is why, in Hindu funerals,
the corpse is first burned and then the ashes and bones are cast in the river. Fire
and running water represent the two paths mentioned in Chapter 8 of The Gita,
one offering liberation and the other offering entrapment.

Arjuna, the two paths are twins: like fire and smoke, the waxing and
waning moons, the course of the rising sun towards the north before
rains and towards the south after.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 8, verses 24
and 25 (paraphrased).
The Two Paths of Rebirth and Liberation

This life is not the first time you and I have experienced each other. We
have been here before, but we have not learned, from past experiences,
that much of life defies explanation and control, that life always offers a
second chance and that the world existed before us and will continue to
exist after us. As long as we resist reality, we will not discover the
immortal, and go from lifetime to lifetime, hungry for meaning and
validation.
3.
You and I experience life differently

Is the idea of immortality and rebirth real or conceptual? What is real? Can the
conceptual be real? Our understanding of reality is a function of the capabilities
of our body or deha, home of the atma. What is real for a plant is not real for an
animal, what is real for one human is not real for another. Nature is all about
diversity. This understanding of the body, the instrument through which we
experience and express reality, is not explicitly a part of The Gita, but certainly a
part of Vedic knowledge elaborated in the Upanishads, that Krishna assumes
Arjuna to be familiar with.

The body of a rock is different from the body of a plant, which is different from
the body of an animal, which is different from the body of a human. And so,
what a rock experiences is different from what a plant, animal or human
experiences. Human experiences are further complicated by different modes of
expression: some humans express accurately, others imaginatively; some speak
literally and others use metaphors. Further, what is reality for humans cannot be
the reality of God. Hindu mythology constantly refers to this four-fold division
of the world—the world of elements, plants, animals and humans. Symbolically,
it is represented by the swastika.
Four-fold Division of the World

The elements (bhutas)—sky, earth, wind, water and fire— constitute the
world. However, they do not experience the world, as they do not possess organs
(indriyas) to sense or respond to what is around them. Stars, rocks and rivers are
not sentient. They move, but do not act. They do not seek opportunities or avoid
threats. They do not feel or think. If they do, we do not know, as they cannot
express themselves, or at least we cannot fathom their responses. They do not
seem to experience death, as they do not demonstrate any struggle for life. Even
fire, that needs fuel to survive, does not seek out fuel. It simply dies out when
the fuel is exhausted. Elements are therefore considered lifeless (a-jiva).
Plants, animals and humans constitute the living (sa-jiva). They depend on
air (prana) and so are called breathers (prani). To stay alive, and keep breathing,
living organisms seek food. To find food, plants grow and animals run. Both
experience hunger and fear. They want to eat, not be eaten. They want to live,
not die. They fight to survive.
Plants have sense organs (gyana-indriyas) to sense the external world and
respond to water, sunlight and change of seasons. But they are immobile (a-
chara), unable to run from danger, unlike animals (chara) which clearly have
more response organs (karma-indriyas). The five sense organs are eyes, ears,
nose, tongue and skin. The five response organs are hands, legs, mouth, anus and
genitals.
Animals, especially ones with larger brains, display a greater degree of
emotions (chitta) and some degree of intelligence (buddhi). They remember
things. They make choices. They solve simple problems. They form packs to
find food, hives to store food and herds to protect themselves. They establish
pecking orders to get a greater share of food and mates. They take care of their
young. Some even display personality.
Humans are dramatically different. In us, senses, emotions and intelligence
are highly developed. But what really makes us unique is our imagination
(manas). While plants and animals experience hunger, fear and death, humans
can imagine infinite hunger and infinite fear and infinite death. Humans can also
imagine a world without hunger, fear or death. Hence, the idea of immortality!
The ability to conjure up a conceptual reality (how the world should be) different
from emotional experience (how the world feels) or sensory experiences (what is
actually sensed) is unique to human beings and unique for every human being.
Your reality is different from my reality, because your body is different, your
filters are different, your experiences are different, your knowledge is different.
Krishna experiences every slice (bhaga) of reality, that of elements, plants,
animals as well as humans. That is why he is called God (bhaga-van) in The
Gita.

Arjuna, know that I am the sun, the moon, the fire. I am the sap that
makes plants blossom. I am the digestive fire and breath of animals. I
eat. I think, remember, understand and forget as humans do. I am the
transmitter, the teacher, the scholar and the wise. I am the perishable and
the imperishable. And that which supports both.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 15, verses 12 to 18 (paraphrased).

Many Bodies in Nature

In Vedanta, the body is visualized as a series of containers. The flesh is the


outermost container and is made up of the senses. It is composed of food and
serves as food, and so it is called the container of food (anna-kosha). It is
animated by the container of breath (prana-kosha). Within are the container of
thoughts (mana-kosha), the container of beliefs (vi-gyana-kosha or buddhi-
kosha) and finally the container of emotions (chitta-kosha). In plants, there are
only the containers of the flesh and the breath. In animals, there are the
containers of the flesh, breath and emotions. In some animals there is also the
container of thoughts, influencing emotions. Only in humans is found the
container of beliefs, ideas that humans use to make sense of the world around.
Our thoughts and beliefs shape our emotions; our emotions also determine our
thoughts and beliefs.

Five Containers of the Body

These five containers create three realities: sensory reality that depends on
the flesh (indriyas), emotional reality that depends on the heart (chitta) and
conceptual reality that depends on imagination (manas) and intelligence
(buddhi). Elements (bhutas) inhabit none of these realities. Plants (a-chara)
inhabit the sensory reality. Higher animals (chara) inhabit the emotional reality
as well. But only humans (manavas) inhabit all three.
Three Realities

What distinguishes humans from the rest of nature is our ability to imagine
reality. We can conjure up the opposite of what we experience. While the senses
experience pain, our mind can imagine happiness. While the senses experience
pleasure, our mind can imagine sorrow. While the senses experience form, our
mind can imagine formlessness. While the senses experience finiteness, our
mind can imagine infiniteness. While the senses experience mortality, our mind
can imagine immortality.
Imagination helps us create concepts, which filter our sensory inputs and
ultimately impact our emotional experience. Thus, we can imagine a rock or
river to be a deity and so condition ourselves to feel joyful whenever we
encounter that rock or river. Our emotional experiences can also inform and
shape our concepts. So, when a rock or river gives us joy in some way, we
declare it must be a deity. Concepts therefore help us rationalize emotions;
emotions help us rationalize concepts—it is a two-way process.

Mental Processes

When presented with the same stimuli, all plants and animals of the same
species usually respond in a similar way. Variations are few, and mostly in
higher animals. However, the same set of stimuli is read differently by different
humans who harbour different concepts. This is why Dhritarashtra, Duryodhana
and Arjuna respond to the battleground of Kuru-kshetra very differently. The
journey from human to divine is to achieve conceptual clarity and appreciate the
world as it is, while empathizing with how others perceive it.
But are concepts real? Are they not products of the imagination? How can
we value imagination?
This distinguishing of the imaginary from the real overlooks the fact that
humans are humans because of the ability to imagine. All the things that we
value—justice, equality, free speech, human rights—are actually concepts
churned out of imagination, just like ideas such as God, heaven, hell, rebirth and
immortality. We may classify these ideas as secular or religious, rational or
supernatural, value one over the other, but they are essentially creations of
humans, by humans, for humans. They are artificial constructions, not natural
phenomena. They have no independent existence outside humans.
Even our identity (aham) is essentially how we imagine ourselves, a concept.
Nature does not care for our tribal roots, our social structures or our cultural
hierarchies. It does not care for how we qualify our actions or judge each other.
Yet our identity matters to us, as do our concepts, because we are human. Our
concepts establish our humanity and help us cope with the terror of nature and
biology.

Imagined Concepts

That Arjuna grants himself an identity (Pandava, Kaunteya, Kuru), gives


meaning to people around him (friends and family), ascribes value to his action
(good or bad) and predicts its reactions (collapse of society) stems from his
ability to imagine, construct or inherit boundaries and inhabit conceptual spaces.
It is an indicator of his humanity.

Arjuna, the senses exist beyond the physical; mind beyond the senses;
intelligence beyond the mind. Beyond intelligence is your sense of self.
By knowing who you really are you will conquer all yearning.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3, verses 42 and 43 (paraphrased).

The conceptual reality of Krishna—where immortality is a fact—makes him


function without fear, and gain insight about life without imposing the filter of
conflict. The conceptual reality of Dhritarashtra and Duryodhana—where
victimhood is a fact— makes them function in rage, imagine persecution and
harbour an intense desire to change the world. Which imagination is the
appropriate one?
Science does not share The Gita’s enthusiasm about imagination. Science
values the finite, the measurable entity, while The Gita values the infinite
(ananta) and the immortal (nitya), which are unmeasurable concepts.
The reality constructed by science is dependent on measuring instruments.
However, it is easier to measure things than feelings. This is why physics,
chemistry and biology are considered ‘pure’ sciences, while psychology is
considered a ‘pseudo’ or ‘imperfect’ science. We can at best use bodily
responses to emotions to understand the functioning of the mind, as
neuropsychology and behavioural science tend to do.
The humanities, subjects such as sociology, history, economics, management
and politics, which involve humans, are no longer called ‘social sciences’
because while the data may be computed scientifically, the analysis is invariably
influenced by the prejudice of the analyst, the philosophy he subscribes to and
the concepts he believes to be true.

Classification of Sciences

That being said, concepts do play a key role in science, especially


mathematics. Zero (shunya) and infinity (ananta) are called imagined numbers,
because their existence cannot be proven in material reality. I can show you one
tree, two trees, three trees, but I cannot show you ‘zero trees’ or ‘infinite trees’.
These have to be imagined.
Civilizations existed and thrived without the knowledge of these concepts
for centuries. Buddhist, Jain and Hindu philosophers of India conceived both
infinity and zero over two thousand years ago in their attempt to understand both
the psychological and the physical world. The hermits preferred the concept of
withdrawal into oblivion, hence zero, while the householders preferred the
concept of embracing everything, hence infinity. Today, zero and infinity play a
key role in calculus and help scientists around the world solve technological
problems of the real world.
Concepts in Philosophy and Math

Like infinity and zero, immortality is also a concept. By introducing it,


Krishna increases the canvas of Arjuna’s experience and expands the
denominator of his existence. It makes him look at life differently—this life is
not the only life we live; it is but one of many lives; our actions have infinite
consequences; we have limitless choices, if we open our mind to them. Thus, a
shift in imagination brings about a dramatic shift in identity, meaning, value,
assumptions and aspirations.

Arjuna, people worship limited deities, limited as they are by their


nature and their yearnings. From me comes their faith. From me comes
fulfilment of their faith. The restricted stay restrained. Those who shatter
the boundaries discover me: the limitless.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7,
verses 20 to 23 (paraphrased).

Literal and Metaphorical


Those who are comfortable with imagination appreciate metaphors and
symbols. Those who are not prefer the literal. Only through metaphors and
symbols can one convey the conceptual. Without poetry, you cannot
communicate ideas that are not material and measurable, like love, or justice or
remarkability. But The Gita recognizes that the world is made up of different
people, those who can only deal with the tangibility of mortality and those who
can deal with the intangibility of immortality and rebirth. Krishna does not
expect people to experience the world the same way as he does, or respond to the
world exactly as he does. This is why Krishna has a ‘menu-card’ approach to
solutions, suiting different capabilities and capacities.

Arjuna, immerse your mind in me and I will uplift you from the ocean of
recurring death. If you cannot do that, then practise yoga and work on
your mind. If you cannot do that, then do your work as if it is my work.
If you cannot do that, then make yourself my instrument and do as I say.
If you cannot do that, then simply do your job and leave the results to
me.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 12, verses 6 to 11 (paraphrased).

My deha is different from yours. My hungers are different from yours.


My assumptions are different from yours. My capabilities are different
from yours. My experiences are diferent from yours. My expressions are
different from yours.
4.
You and I seek meaning

The immortal resident of the body, the dehi, watches how the body experiences
the world around it. But what is dehi exactly? Is it the senses that make the body
responsive to external stimuli? Is it the mind within the body, or thoughts and
ideas and imaginations within the mind, or concepts that filter all sensation and
influence emotions? It is something unmeasurable, mystifying and debatable,
like consciousness? Or is it conceptual clarity that bestows tranquillity? Does
that conceptual clarity involve appreciating the unique human ability to give
meaning to ourselves and the world around? We shall explore these ideas in this
chapter.

Right at the start of The Gita, Krishna refers to dehi, the immortal that dwells in
the body.

Arjuna, weapons cannot pierce it, fire cannot burn it, water cannot wet
it, wind cannot dry it. It is everywhere, at all times, fixed, immovable.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, verses 23 and 24 (paraphrased).

Later, he refers to dehi as atma, the immortal located in the body, but beyond the
reach of the senses and the mind.
Arjuna, detached, tranquil, assured, the observer resides in the city of
nine gates.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 5, Verse 13 (paraphrased).

Bird Watching the Bird Eating Fruit

The Rig Veda speaks of a bird that watches another bird eating fruit. This is
a metaphor of the world (fruit), the body (bird eating fruit) and the dehi (bird
watching bird eating fruit). We can watch others, and ourselves, seeking ‘fruit’.

Krishna describes dehi, located inside the body, very much the same way as
he describes purusha, located inside all of nature that surrounds the body. If dehi
is within the self, purusha is within the other.

Arjuna, prakriti is responsible for all events around you. Purusha,


resident of nature, experiences these events as painful and pleasurable
circumstances.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, verses 20 and 21
(paraphrased).

The body we inhabit, and nature that is all around our body, is tangible (sa-
guna). What resides in our body, and in nature, is not (nir-guna). Deha and
prakriti are within the reach of the senses; they are bound by the rules of space
and time, which means that they can be measured and are impermanent. Dehi
and purusha, however, are outside the reach of the senses, and are not bound by
rules of space and time, which means that they cannot be measured and are
permanent.
Deha is part of prakriti. But is dehi a part of purusha? Since both are
immortal and infinite, neither can be confined by space, nor can they be
separated. In other words, dehi is the same as purusha.

Arjuna, it is both in and out, inside the animate and the inanimate, far as
well as near, difficult to gauge as it is subtle. It is not divisible yet
appears divided in separate beings. It is what brings together and creates
anew.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, verses 15 and 16 (paraphrased).

Deha is that which separates us from other entities. Dehi is that which unites
us to others. Deha establishes individuality. Dehi establishes universality. We
discover deha through analysis (sankhya), by figuring out what isolates us from
the world. We discover dehi through synthesis (yoga), by figuring out what
connects us with the world. Arjuna’s deha is not the same as Duryodhana’s,
Arjuna’s deha is not the same as that of the horses that pull his chariot, but the
dehi in Arjuna enables him to feel the fear and hunger in every living creature,
and its absence in non-living creatures.
Deha and Prakriti

Dehi and purusha are the same, yet they are also differentiated. Dehi is
called jiva-atma and purusha is called param-atma, as dehi’s experience is
limited by the deha it resides in, while purusha’s experience is unlimited, as it
resides in limitless prakriti. Dehi or jiva-atma experiences a slice (bhaga) of
reality. Bhagavan, who experiences every slice of reality, is then param-atma.
The jiva-atma, who seeks fulfilment and fullness, is the bhagat or bhakta. Every
living creature is a jiva-atma. For every jiva-atma, other living creatures are
para-atma (the individual other). The collective of all living creatures makes up
the param-atma (the collective other).
This relationship of the deha, prakriti and atma is best visualized in art as a
spoked wheel, where the hub represents my body (deha) and the rim presents the
body of the world around me (prakriti). The atma within us (jiva-atma) radiates
like the spokes of a wheel and connects with the atma (para-atma) within
everyone around us. All of this together constitutes param-atma, the potential
that everyone, including us, can realize. Such a spoked wheel whirls around
Krishna’s finger, indicating that param-atma is more than the sum total of all
individual jiva-atmas. The jiva-atma depends on the param-atma but the param-
atma is not dependent on the jiva-atma.

Arjuna, he is the perceiver of all sense objects without the senses. He is


unattached, yet sustainer of all. He is devoid of all tendencies, yet the
enjoyer of all material tendencies.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, Verse
14 (paraphrased).
Wheel

Exploration of the relationship between jiva-atma and param-atma, between


dehi and deha, purusha and prakriti, bhagavan and bhakta, has led to the many
schools of Vedanta, schools that seek the essence of the Vedas. Advaita saw no
difference between divinity and humanity; dvaita saw a complete separation;
bheda-abheda saw humanity as part of the divine.

Different Schools of Vedanta

Many see dehi as the seed of the purusha-tree. Each seed is separate from the
tree, dependent on the tree, yet containing the tree. This idea is expressed in a
beautiful hymn on completeness (poornamadah poornamidam) found in the Isha
Upanishad: ‘This is complete, that is complete, from completeness comes
completeness, when completeness is added or subtracted, it still remains
complete.’ This hymn refers to the concept of infinity and the capability of
human imagination. You are complete in yourself; I am complete in myself; yet
we are part of a wider human narrative. Like the seed of the tree, we are part of
completeness, as well as our complete selves.
Fruits of the Param-atma Tree

So what exactly is dehi/atma/purusha? Various metaphors are used to


describe it in The Gita: the ocean that is fed by rivers but never overflows
(Chapter 2, Verse 70); the sky that is ever-present but always detached (Chapter
13, Verse 33); the sun that illuminates everything (Chapter 13, Verse 34). From
Chapter 7 onwards, Krishna personifies the idea and starts equating himself with
dehi and purusha, using the first person. Though Krishna sports a male form, he
refers to his ‘wombs’, indicating the metaphorical nature of the language used.

Arjuna, forms and formless are my two wombs. I am the start and the
end, the thread on which the world is strung like jewels. Nothing else but
me.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7, verses 6 and 7 (paraphrased).

Some identify dehi/purusha/atma with the soul. But soul is a Christian


concept and in Christian mythology, especially, there is talk of souls that can get
corrupted and bodies without souls. Dehi/purusha/atma of The Gita is eternally
pure and permeates everywhere, even beings deemed most sinful and foul.
Some say dehi is not material, hence it must be something spiritual. We must
be careful of this term, spiritual. It is an eighteenth-century European term that
once referred to everything from the psychological to the paranormal and the
occult, a meaning that is still popular in New Age religious orders. The West
formally separated the psychological from the paranormal only in the twentieth
century after the works of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, though religious folk
continue to insist that the paranormal is real.
If not material, then dehi/purusha/atma can be mental. But it is also
distinguished from all things that constitute the mind: senses (indriyas),
emotions (chitta), imagination (manas) and intelligence (buddhi). Some,
therefore, identify it with consciousness, the ability to be self-aware. But
scientists and gurus disagree on what consciousness exactly is. Scientists restrict
consciousness to living organisms, especially higher ones, while gurus attribute
consciousness to all of nature, even the inanimate.
Some identify the soul/spirit/consciousness as conscience (viveka). But
conscience is an outcome of imagination and judgement: how we imagine
ourselves and how we want others to judge us. Animals do not have a
conscience, but for Hindus, atma is present in everything.
Ultimately, the exact identity of dehi/purusha/atma will always be elusive,
not just because it defies objective measurement, but also because you and I
experience reality very differently, and use different words to describe our
experiences. What is dehi to you may not be dehi to me. Also, what I thought
dehi was today may not be what I realize dehi is tomorrow. Initially, dehi may
be the mind, then it becomes intelligence, then consciousness, then imagination,
concept, meaning, then something else which defies language. But it exists. And
that is the point.

Arjuna, it exists in the heart of all beings that which is worth knowing,
the knowledge itself, and that which is reached through knowledge. It is
the light that illuminates life, and all of darkness too.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 13, Verse 17 (paraphrased).

What we can be sure of is that dehi cannot be an entity, as by definition it


cannot be measured. It has to be a concept. It can at best be experienced, hence it
is a subjective truth, indifferent to the rules of science.

Arjuna, it has no beginning and has no qualities, and so does not change.
It is located in the body, but it does nothing and covets nothing.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, verses 31 and 32 (paraphrased).

According to the five-container architecture of the body described in the


Upanishads, our breath resides within our flesh, our mind resides within our
breath, our concepts reside within our mind and our emotions reside within our
concepts. We can only see the flesh and breath. We can sense the emotions by
the way they are expressed through the body and the breath. Sensations received
by the mind are filtered by concepts to create emotions. Emotions affect our
mind and shape our concepts. When there is conceptual clarity, we experience
tranquillity (ananda), no matter what the sensory experience is. Atma then
becomes an idea that offers conceptual clarity, that establishes connection (yoga)
with the world as it really is, not what we imagine it to be.

Atma as Conceptual Clarity

In the absence of conceptual clarity, the dominant emotion is fear, fear of


losing opportunities, fear of threats, fear of achievement, fear of abandonment,
fear of invalidation. The emotion of fear impacts the way we think and what we
believe. It contaminates the filtering of sensations and choice of responses. It
creates a vicious cycle where atma is eclipsed by aham, our judgemental self.
Conceptual clarity draws attention to language, a key theme of the Vedas.
Many animals use language to communicate. Their language is descriptive.
Human language is used to analyse, construct and convey complex meaning.
Through sound, image or gesture meaning is conveyed. That which is expressed
(shabda) contains layers of meaning (shabda-brahmana), some literal, some
metaphorical. These evoke multiple emotions (rasa) and experiences (bhava).
Shabda is tangible (sa-guna), shabda-brahmana is intangible (nir-guna). Only
through shabda, can shabda-brahmana be expressed and experienced. If we
imagine our body as a shabda, then we are containers of meaning. Only thorugh
our bodies can that meaning be expressed and experienced. When Hindus say
that everything around us has atma, and bow to rocks and rivers, plants, animals,
and humans, it is an acknowledgement that everyone and everything is
meaningful and valid.
Atma as Meaning

Like animals that seek food for their survival, humans yearn for meaning for
their sanity: what is our value, our purpose and our identity in this world? As
long as we seek validation from the world around us, we are entrapped by aham.
As soon as we realize that all meaning comes from within, that it is we who
make the world meaningful, we are liberated by atma.

Arjuna, this fabulous all-encompassing being who resides within you,


who is me really, and you really, is that which observes, approves,
enables and enjoys ultimately.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, Verse 22
(paraphrased).

When we say that everything around us has atma, and we bow to rocks and
rivers, plants and animals, to people around us, living and dead, we essentially
mean that everything around is meaningful and valid. Who decides this? The
dehi within, as well as the purusha without. We give meaning to others. We get
meaning from others. We give meaning to each other. We may die but things
continue to be meaningful, for atma never dies. There is always someone to give
meaning.
Food and Meaning

Plants and animals, including humans, seek food. Additionally, humans


also seek meaning: the dehi within the deha, the meaning within the
word, the soul within the body, the metaphorical within the literal.
5.
You and I have to face consequences

The quest for food, security and meaning propels the living into action. Every
action has reactions. Reactions create circumstances that we constantly
experience. Can we control our circumstances, create fortune and avoid
misfortune, by regulating our actions and the actions of others? Or can we
simply withdraw from activity, turn away from all sensory seductions, save
ourselves from disappointment and heartbreak, and thus find peace? Is there
such a thing as good action and bad action? Can good actions have bad reactions
and bad actions, good? Answers to these questions constitute the doctrine of
karma that means both action as well as reaction, which Krishna elaborates in
Chapter 3 of The Gita.

In nature, gravity forces movement in all things inanimate. Plants defy


gravity and grow towards the sky, propelled by the fear of death to seek sunlight
and consume it as food, along with minerals and water pulled up by their roots.
Animals graze and hunt and migrate for food. The act of eating is violent, as
elements and plants and animals are devoured by the hungry. Where there is life,
there is hunger. Where there is hunger, there is food. Where there is food, there
is violence. Where there is violence, there are consequences. Nature is violent, as
the hungry seek food. This is the fundamental truth of life.
In human society, violence is regulated. Forests are destroyed to make way
for fields. Riverbanks are destroyed to create dams and canals. Natural
ecosystems are wiped out to make way for human settlements. In the
Mahabharata, the Pandavas burn the forest of Khandava-prastha to build their
city of Indra-prastha. The price is high: the resident snake people, the nagas,
never forgive them or their descendants.
In human society, violence transforms: it is not just physical. It is also
psychological, as people are stripped of their freedom, bound by rules, located in
hierarchies and restricted by boundaries. Culture is created by domestication: the
violent control of the earth and the violent control of the human mind.

So when Arjuna wonders if it is better to withdraw from the battle, Krishna


does not endorse this apparently noble choice. For non-violence is only possible
when one gives up hunger, and no one, not even a hermit, can give up all hunger.
His body needs nourishment and for that he needs food. The act of cultivation of
food is violent, as is the act of keeping away those who wish to steal our food.
Only the non-living (a-jiva) are non-violent as they are not hungry. The living
(sa-jiva) eat; eating involves violence.

Arjuna, even when you do nothing, you still act. By simply withdrawing
from society, you do not get freedom. Everyone who is born, who is
alive, who is dependent, acts, compelled to do so by nature itself. He
who controls the senses but has a mind full of cravings is a pretender
who fools himself. Do what you have to do, rather than not doing
anything at all. You need to act if you want your body to function.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3, verses 4 to 8 (paraphrased).

The atma, resident of the body, is never hungry, and so does not crave food,
and so is not violent. It witnesses this hunger-propelled violence, without
judgement.
Hunger and No Hunger

From fear of death comes hunger, hence the quest for food, hence violence.
Fear of death by violence makes animals sexual, so that they reproduce and
ensure that at least some part of their being outlives death. And that which is
reproduced carries with it the fear of death, hence hunger, hence violence and
sex. Thus, cause is an action (karma) and the consequence is also an action
(karma). Karma is both action and reaction. Each moment is a fruit (karma-
phala) of the past and a seed (karma-bija) of the future. And just as every seed
need not germinate, just as the quality of the fruit depends on various external
factors like sunlight and quality of soil and availability of water, the reaction of
every action is unpredictable. With unpredictability comes uncertainty, which
amplifies fear.

Arjuna, fair or unfair, the results of any action depend on five things: the
body, the mind, the instruments, the method and divine grace (luck?
fate?). Only the ignorant think they alone are responsible for any
outcome.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, verses 13 to 16 (paraphrased).

This acceptance of uncertainty is the hallmark of mythologies that believe in


rebirth. Here, the world is always changing and so the point is to observe it,
rather than judge or control it. Western mythologies, in contrast, speak of a
world that is either imperfect (Abrahamic mythology) or chaotic and unfair
(Greek mythology). There is a yearning to change, to convert, to revolt, to make
the world a better place. There is always a goal. Actions are classified as good or
bad, right or wrong, moral or amoral, ethical or unethical, depending on the goal.

Arjuna, as I do not bind myself to the fruit of my action, my actions do


not entrap me.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 14 (paraphrased).
Certainty of Endings

This criticality of a climax or goalpost is alien to Vedic thought.

Arjuna, those who yearn for pleasure, power and paradise, constantly
have their eye on the fruits of their birth, their actions, their rites and
rituals. They focus on the Vedas cosmetically. They don’t see the
meaning within. They never attain wisdom.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2,
verses 42 to 44 (paraphrased).

Hindu mythology sees destinations as artificial milestones. What is natural,


however, is action. Every action has a reaction, immediate results and long-term
repurcussions. Karma refers to both action and reaction. It is cause as well as
consequence. It is stimulus as well as response.

Karma-bija and Karma-phala

In nature, there is continuous transformation: spring gives way to summer


that brings in the rain, then autumn and finally winter. All animals go through
four phases of life: childhood, youth, maturity and old age. Cultures (sanskriti),
too, go through multiple phases (yuga): Krita, Treta, Dvapara, Kali. The
presence of Ram or Krishna does not impact the flow of events. Pralaya or
dissolution of culture is as certain as the death of a living being. And just as
nature renews itself every year with the rains, just as cultures go through many
lifetimes (kalpa), renewing themselves after every collapse (pralaya), so are
humans reborn after death.
Arjuna, that which is born will die and that which will die will be born.
So it is pointless to cling and mourn. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2,
Verse 27 (paraphrased).

This idea is made explicit through stories. The Ramayana does not begin
with the birth of Ram or end with his death. Before he was Ram, he was
Parashurama at the end of the Krita yuga. After he was Ram, he will be Krishna
at the end of the Dvapara yuga. These are various lifetimes of Vishnu, who
otherwise reclines in Vaikuntha, located on the shoreless ocean of milk,
observing worlds rise and fall like waves of the sea.
But humans can imagine: we can imagine a world that is stable and
controlled, all evidence in nature and culture notwithstanding. We can imagine
attracting fortune and keeping misfortune at bay. And so we can classify actions
as good and bad. Actions that help others and us are good. Actions that do not
help others or us are bad.
For example, Arjuna imagines the horror that can follow if he kills his
family, people he is expected to protect. It will result in a world where no one is
trustworthy, a world where no boundaries are valid, where no commitment is
sacred, and where integrity has no value. So he concludes his action is paap:
karma that will result in misfortune. He considers not fighting family as punya:
karma that will result in fortune. But Krishna points out that it is difficult to
distinguish between action that is meritorious and action that is not.

Arjuna, there is appropriate action, incorrect action and inaction,


difficult to distinguish. The wise can spot action in inaction and inaction
in action. The wise act without clinging to the results of action, are
content with whatever is the outcome, and so are unburdened by merit or
demerit.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, verses 17 to 22 (paraphrased).
Action of Various Entities

In the Ramayana, for example, Dashratha keeps his word to Kaikeyi and
agrees to give her the two boons she is entitled to. Integrity is good. But the
result is the exile of Ram. That is bad. A reaction may be good in the short term
but not in the long term. In the Bhagvata Purana, Krishna kills Kansa, the
dictator of Mathura. This is good. But Kansa’s enraged father-in-law,
Jarasandha, burns Mathura to the ground. This is not good. An apparently good
action can have a bad reaction. In the Ramayana, Sita goes out of her way to
feed a hermit and ends up getting kidnapped. Likewise, an apparently bad action
can also have good results. In the Mahabharata, the burning of the Khandava-
prastha forest, which kills many forest creatures, enables the building of the
Pandava kingdom of Indra-prastha.

Karma

The complexity of karma is demonstrated in the following Telugu folk tale


based on the Mahabharata: a little girl was drinking milk from a pot when
Karna’s chariot rolled past. Startled, she dropped the pot. The pot broke and the
earth soaked up the milk. The girl began to cry. Karna saw this, stopped the
chariot and decided to get the milk back for the little girl. He took the moist
earth in his hand and squeezed out the milk in the pot, much to the girl’s
astonishment and delight. Everyone praised the great warrior. Thus, Karna’s
action yielded an expected output. But the outcome was unpredictable. The earth
was furious that Karna had squeezed milk out of her. She swore that one day she
would take her revenge. So on the battlefield of Kuru-kshetra, she grabbed hold
of Karna’s chariot wheel, squeezing it as hard as he had squeezed her, forcing
him to alight and pull the wheel free. And while he was thus distracted, with his
back to the enemy, he was shot dead. His blood fell on the ground and the earth
soaked it all up. Karna’s action thus had two reactions, an immediate one and a
subsequent one. The immediate one was perceivable. The subsequent one was
not. The latter reaction created the circumstances of Karna’s death.
Sequence of Cause and Consequence

In the Hindu scheme of things, circumstances are not created accidentally, or


by others, but by our own actions of the past. We can appreciate this by
analysing the Ramayana. Who is responsible for Sita’s abduction by Ravana?
Should we blame her for taking a risk and feeding a hermit? Should we blame
Lakshmana who cruelly cut the nose of Ravana’s sister Surpanakha? Or should
we blame Surpanakha who tried to kill Sita so that her husband, Ram, would be
free to love other women? Should we blame Ram who refused to indulge
Surpanakha’s desires because he wanted to be faithful to his wife? Or should we
blame Sita for accompanying Ram into the forest where rules of marriage have
no meaning? Should we blame Ram’s stepmother, Kaikeyi, for demanding his
forest exile? Or should we blame Ram’s father, Dashratha, for giving boons to
Kaikeyi that the royal family was bound to uphold? Even if we identify the
cause, can we control the action and determine future consequences? Maybe we
can imagine control over our actions, but we have no control over other people’s
actions, hence the results.

Arjuna, you have control over your action alone, not the fruits of your
action. So do not be drawn to expectation, or inaction.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 2, Verse 47 (paraphrased).

Those who believe in karma do not blame. They do not judge. They accept
that humans live in a sea of consequences, over which there is limited control.
So they accept every moment as it is supposed to be. They act without
expectation. This is nishkama karma.

Arjuna, you can choose actions, not reactions. Do not choose action
because of the reactions. Do not choose inaction either.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 27 (paraphrased).

I want to control your actions and reactions. You want to control my


actions and reactions. We want to control the world around us, make it
predictable. To act is karma. Karma yoga is when we act without
seeking control over the outcome.
6.
You and I can empathize

If karma yoga is action without expectation, then what should the motivation of
our action be? Plants and animals act in order to find food and security only for
themselves and their young ones. Humans can also act to find food and security
for others, even strangers. Can this be human motivation? To realize this
potential is dharma. Dharma is the first word uttered in The Gita. It is often
confused as righteousness. The conflict between dharma and adharma is a point
raised by Arjuna in Chapter 1. Empathy is not about controlling others through
rules. This is why Krishna continuously distinguishes between sva-dharma and
para-dharma, appropriate conduct of the self and the other.

Dharma is popularly translated as ‘righteousness’, which involves following


punya and shunning paap. It has also come to mean religion, which is essentially
about rules that come from a supernatural or superhuman source. So much so
that today verses from The Gita are often translated using the tone of a judge and
saviour, similar to that in Western mythologies. It appeals to our yearning for a
hero. So, verses 7 and 8 of Chapter 4 are typically translated as, ‘Arjuna, in age
after age, whenever humanity forgets the righteous way, and functions in
unrighteous ways, I manifest to save the good and punish the bad, to restore
order in the world.’ Such a translation, full of moral outrage, makes no sense to
one with a perspective of infinity, who subscribes to the idea of karma, and so
acts without an eye on any particular outcome. So we need to revisit the
traditional meanings of dharma.

Hero, Saviour and Avatar

In Jainism, dharma refers to natural movement that stabilizes nature;


adharma is artificial stillness that destabilizes nature. In Buddhism, dharma is the
path that helps us accept the transitory nature of all things, including the self. In
Hinduism, dharma means realizing our potential: changing ourselves into the
best we theoretically can be. What is that?
Humans are the only living creatures who can expand their mind and see the
world from another’s point of view. This ability enables humans to empathize, to
care for the other. To empathize is dharma. Failure to empathize is adharma.
With this definition in mind, the above verse can be translated very differently:

‘Arjuna, in age after age, whenever humanity forgets its potential and
functions as it should not, I manifest to inspire those with faith and
shake up those without faith, so that humanity never ever forgets what it
is capable of.’—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, verses 7 and 8
(paraphrased).

In any situation, plants and animals think only of themselves, their hunger
and fear. At best they may think of the hunger and fear of their young ones, or
that of their herd and pack. Dogs do think of their masters, but only their
masters, no one else. They are driven by the instinct of self-preservation and
self-propagation. They do not have the wherewithal to function in any other way.
Humans, however, can sense other people’s, even strangers’, hunger and fear,
and create resources to provide for and protect others. It is the one thing that
makes humans special.
Role of Empathy in Action

Plants and animals do not help others consciously. They cannot help,
because they simply do not have the neurological wherewithal to do so: the
enlarged neo-cortex that only humans have (we can imagine otherwise though,
as we often do in fables or on anecdotal evidence). They do not expect help
either. Humans can help and expect to be helped, which comes from the ability
to imagine and respond to other people’s suffering. Animals have no choice but
to follow their instinct. Humans do have a choice. When we do exercise our
choice, when we value other people’s needs alongside our own, we are following
dharma. When we stay focussed on our own needs at the cost of others’, we are
doing adharma.

Empathy

In nature, plants and animals use their strength and size and cunning to
survive. This is called ‘matsya nyaya’, literally ‘fish justice’, which means the
same thing as ‘jungle law’ in English— might is right, survival of the fittest. But
words like justice and law are human concepts that we impose on nature to make
sense of it. Justice and law presuppose the existence of a judicial system of
judges and lawyers; in nature, there is no such system. Forces and counter-forces
within nature ensure self-regulation. Dominating the weak, consuming the weak,
in order to survive, is the way of animals. For them, it is instinct, not aspiration.
When humans display animal behaviour, such as domination and territoriality, it
is adharma, as they are indulging the self.
In the Ramayana, when Hanuman is crossing the sea, Surasa, a sea monster,
blocks his path. Hanuman begs her to let him go as he is on a mission. The sea
monster does not understand. Realizing that the creature is unable to appreciate
his situation and is blinded by hunger, Hanuman increases his size, forcing
Surasa to open her mouth really wide. Hanuman then quickly reduces himself to
the size of a fly, darts into Surasa’s mouth and slips out before she can snap her
wide jaws shut. In this story, Surasa is no villain for blocking Hanuman’s path
and Hanuman is no hero for outsmarting Surasa. In nature, there are only hungry
predators and their food, the prey; villains and heroes are human perceptions.

Big Fish and Small Fish

In nature, every creature has to fend for itself. There are no rules in the
jungle. Rules exist only in human culture to restrain the strong and enable the
weak. Ram submits to these cultural rules; Ravana does not. However, in the
Mahabharata, despite rules, the way of the jungle thrives. In fact, rules are
exploited to further domination and territoriality. At Kuru-kshetra, a hundred
Kaurava brothers use the might of their eleven armies to twist rules and deny the
five Pandava brothers, who have only seven armies, access to Indra-prastha,
which is Pandava land and their livelihood. The Pandavas cannot afford to burn
another Khandava-prastha, destroy more forests and ecosystems, to create
another city simply to accommodate the Kauravas’ greed. Besides, there are no
guarantees that the Kauravas will not crave that new city too. Withdrawal would
mean starvation for the Pandavas, and legitimization of the Kauravas’ bullying.
The Pandavas act according to dharma—they have no choice but to fight for
their survival, as no one empathizes with them, no one even accepts their offer of
compromise. The Kauravas, though, practise adharma as they could have
empathized, shared, compromised and prevented the war, but they choose not to.

Matysa-nyaya in Kuru-kshetra

The Gita acknowledges the diversity and dynamism of the world. Everyone
is born with a different capability (varna): some advise society (Brahmins), some
protect society (Kshatriyas), some feed society (Vaishyas) and some serve
society (Shudras). Everyone has to go through different stages of life (ashrama):
a student (brahmacharya), a householder (grihastha), a retired person
(vanaprastha) and a hermit (sanyasa). The Puranas tell us that society is
constantly changing; every culture goes through four phases (yuga) moving from
innocence (Krita) to maturity (Treta) to struggle (Dvapara) to decay (Kali). How
does one uphold dharma in different contexts?
Typically people come up with rules—traditions (riti) and laws (niti), and
equate them with dharma. Compliance then becomes dharma and non-
compliance adharma. But things are not so simple. What matters more than
action is intent, which is not tangible, hence rather invisible.
Diversity and Dynamism

Rules vary with context. In the Ramayana, which takes place in Treta yuga,
Vishnu is Ram, eldest son of a royal family. In the Mahabharata, which takes
place in Dvapara yuga, Vishnu is Krishna, youngest son of a noble family, who
is raised by cowherds but who performs as a charioteer. They are expected to
behave differently. Ram is obligated to follow the rules of the family, clan and
kingdom, and uphold family honour. Krishna is under no such obligation. This is
why Krishna tells Arjuna to focus on dharma in his context (sva-dharma) rather
than dharma in another’s context (para-dharma).

Arjuna, better to do what you have been asked to do imperfectly than try
to do perfectly what others have been asked to. All work has
inadequacies; even fire is enveloped by smoke.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 18, verses 47 and 48 (paraphrased).

In the Ramayana Ram upholds rules, while Ravana breaks them. In the
Mahabharata Duryodhana upholds rules, while Krishna breaks them. As eldest
sons of their respective clans, Ram and Duryodhana are obliged to uphold rules.
Ravana, son of a Brahmin, and Krishna, raised by cowherds, are under no such
obligations. Dharma, however, is upheld only by Ram and Krishna, not Ravana
and Duryodhana. Ram is constantly concerned about his city Ayodhya’s welfare,
while Ravana does not care if his Lanka burns. Krishna cares for the Pandavas,
who happen to be the children of his aunt, but the Kauravas do not care for the
Pandavas, who happen to be the children of their uncle. Dharma thus has nothing
to with rules or obligations. It has to do with intent and caring for the other, be it
your kingdom or your family.
Ravana argues his case passionately, as do those who fight on the Kaurava
side, from Bhisma to Drona, Karna and Shalya. They justify their actions on
grounds of justice, fairness, legitimacy, duty, loyalty, fidelity and commitment.
None of them sees the other (para); they are too blinded by the self (aham).
Logic serves as a lawyer to defend their stance.
But while Ravana and Duryodhana judge, Ram and Krishna never do so.
They never complain or justify. Ram does not justify the mutilation of
Surpankha (karma-bija) and silently accepts the end of his happiness that follows
(karma-phala), for after that event Sita is kidnapped, and even after her rescue,
the two are separated thanks to gossip. Krishna does not resist when the killing
of the Kauravas (karma-bija) causes their mother Gandhari to blame and curse
Krishna and his family (karma-phala).

Dharma Versus Riti and Niti

Vishnu is not angry with Ravana or Duryodhana or Duryodhana’s


commanders, for he can see the roots of their self-obsession and psychological
blindness. These come from a sense of isolation and abandonment. They feel
they have to fend for themselves and there is no one who can help them; and so,
rather than realize their human potential, they regress to their animal nature,
focussing on outrunning imagined predators, fending off imagined rivals and
consuming imagined prey. When humans behave as animals do, despite the
human ability to outgrow animal nature, it is adharma. It evokes compassion in
Vishnu. For him, the villainy of Ravana and Duryodhana is viparit-bhakti,
reverse love, born of hunger, fear and a yearning for love.

Arjuna, no one is hurt when you walk this path of humanity; no one is
killed; even a little effort helps you fear less.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter
2, Verse 40 (paraphrased).

Dharma is more about empathy than ethics, about intent rather than
outcome. I follow dharma when I am concerned about your material,
emotional or intellectual hunger. I follow adharma when I focus on my
hunger at the cost of yours.
7.
You and I can exchange

Empathy enables exchange. I can satisfy a hunger of yours and you can satisfy a
hunger of mine. This refers not just to physical hunger, but psychological hunger
as well. This act of mutual feeding informs the yagna, the ancient Vedic ritual,
which establishes the human ecosystem of mutuality, reciprocity, obligations
and expectations that we shall explore in this chapter. Yagna is a key theme in
chapters 3 and 4 of The Gita. In Vedic tradition, technically, the word ‘karma’
refers to yagna. Karma yoga begins when we acknowledge that we are always
part of an exchange.

Krishna declares that the only action worth doing is yagna. Yagna refers to the
Vedic fire ritual, 4,000 years old, nowadays abbreviated to the havan.

Arjuna, all actions other than yagna entrap us. Yagna alone liberates us.
—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3, Verse 9 (paraphrased).

The association of yagna with a battle seems strange. However, in The Gita
Krishna looks upon it as a metaphor, indicative of relationships. To appreciate
this, we have to look at the basics of a yagna.
He who initiates the yagna is called the yajamana. He invokes a deity
(devata) and offers him food (bhog) exclaiming, ‘Svaha!’, meaning, ‘This of
mine I give you’. He hopes that the invoked deity will give him what he desires
(prasad), exclaiming, ‘Tathastu!’ or ‘So be it’. This indicates an exchange.

Yagna

Yagna is a very special form of exchange, where we can give and hope to
receive. It is give and get, not give and take. When we take without giving, we
become the oppressors. When we give and don’t get, we become the oppressed.
Feeding the other is dharma. Not expecting reciprocation is nishkama karma.

Arjuna, the wise define renunciation as giving up action and detachment


as giving up expectation.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, Verse 2
(paraphrased).

The yagna is mentioned in the first verse (rig) of the first hymn (sukta) of the
first book (mandala) of the collection (samhita) known as Rig Veda because it is
a reminder of our humanity. No animal feeds another except its own offspring; at
best, its pack or herd. Humans can feed everyone around them. Humans can also
return the favour. To trade is a very unique human phenomenon. Trading
behaviour has been documented in chimpanzees and vampire bats, but nothing
on the human scale.
Exchange creates a network of expectations and obligations. Yagna thus is
the cornerstone of sanskriti (culture). This idea echoes the sentiment of modern
economists who see the market as the foundation of society.
When humans began exchanging, we stepped out of the animal world. From
exchange came ideas of mutuality, reciprocity, expectation, obligation, debt and
balancing accounts that shaped culture. Yagna is a ritual reminder of this very
human ability.

Arjuna, way back, Brahma created humans through yagna and declared
that yagna will satisfy all human needs. Use yagna to satisfy the other
and the other will satisfy you. If you take without giving, you are a thief.
Those who feed others and eat leftovers are free of all misery. Those
who cook for themselves are always unhappy. Humans need food. Food
needs rain. Rain needs exchange. Exchange needs action. Exchange
began with divinity, that primal spark of humanity. Those who indulge
themselves, those who do not repay it backwards, as well as pay it
forward, break the chain, are miserable and spread misery.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 3, verses 10 to 16 (paraphrased).

In the Kalpa-sutras, which elaborate Vedic household rituals, the yajamana


is advised to perform five yagnas (pancha-yagna) to feed everyone around: the
self, the other, family, birds and animals and ancestors. When we do that, the
boundary between family and stranger is removed. As the Upanishads say: the
whole world becomes family (vasudaivah kutumbakam).

Yagna for Relationships


In most writings, yagna is translated as ‘sacrifice’. This translation came
from the European Orientalists of the eighteenth century who never really
conducted the ritual or witnessed it. They probably equated the yagna with the
blood sacrifices seen in tribal communities around the world to appease
fearsome spirits, or even with the sacrifice of Abraham’s son demanded by
Abraham’s God as a mark of love and obedience.
Later, scholars realized that there was another word for sacrifice in the Vedic
texts, bali, and that yagna was clearly a larger concept. Historians drew attention
to the practice of honouring deities (puja) with food, flowers, incense and lamps,
that became popular in Puranic times. This had its roots in the Vedic practice of
pouring ghee into fire. Both are acts of invocation and libation. Yagna came to
be seen as an earlier form of puja. So yagna was then translated as ‘worship’.
But the Puranas show yagna in a very different light. In the Ramayana and
the Mahabharata, kings perform yagna to get children. Mantras chanted yield
instant results: a god is obliged to give a woman a child, or turn an ordinary
arrow into a deadly missile. Yagna thus assumes expectation and obligation,
giving in order to get. Yagna is clearly an exchange.
The word ‘exchange’ is rarely used to explain yagna. It is problematic. It
lacks nobility. We have learned to valourize sacrifice, where there is giving
without getting. We even celebrate worship, where getting is a surprise, a bonus,
not the outcome of any expectation. This, despite the fact that the last hymn of
every yagna and puja is always the chant of expected outcomes (phala-stuti).
Perhaps we have been conditioned to be ashamed of human yearnings, maybe by
mendicants of the Buddhist, Jain and Hindu orders who chose to renounce the
world. Perhaps our preference for socialism in the post-Independence era made
us frown upon the idea of exchange, as it reeks of a trader mentality. How can
we trade with the divine?
By calling the battle at Kuru-kshetra a yagna, Krishna indicates that Arjuna
is part of an exchange. Either he is the yajamana who will please his brothers, or
he is the devata who has to repay the debt he owes his brothers. The Pandavas
depend on him, and he is indebted to the Pandavas. To deny these dependencies,
these expectations and obligations, is to deny humanity.
The monastic order rejected the yagna. In essence, they rejected the other.
For yagna is all about paying cognizance to the hunger of the other. The other is
both an individual (para) as well as the collective (param). Yagna is about the
relationship between the individual (aham) and the other (para/param) through
exchange.
In the Shiva Purana, when the hermit Shiva beheads Daksha and destroys his
yagna, all the gods beg him to give life back to the yajamana and restore the
yagna, for without it they will starve. Thus, the devatas depend on the yajamana
as much as the yajamana depends on the devatas. There is interdependence at
play here.

Arjuna, those who offer food to the gods and survive on the leftovers
find brahmana. Not those who offer nothing. Different yagnas are thus
laid at the mouth of the brahmana. It all begins with choosing an action.
Rather than choose to give up the world, choose to understand the
brahmana, which demands action, hence yagna. Thus, informed by the
wise, you will see all beings in yourself, and all beings as part of me.
There will be no confusion.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, verses 26 to 35
(paraphrased).

In Puranic lore, he who gives upon getting is a deva; he who seeks retrieval
of what he thinks has been stolen is an asura; he who grabs, takes without
giving, is a rakshasa; he who hoards is a yaksha! He who does not participate in
the yagna, does not give or want to get, is a shramana or tapasvi, the hermit,
much feared in the Puranas as the cause of drought, hence starvation. Within us
is the yajamana, the devata, the asura, the rakshasa, the yaksha and the
shramana. They manifest in different interactions.

Brahma’s Sons

Once, as Shiva was passing by a yagna-shala, where a yagna was being


conducted, the wives of the yajamanas, the yagna-patnis, ran after him, begging
him to satisfy them. The yajamanas got upset and created, out of the yagna, a
whole bunch of monsters. Shiva destroyed all the monsters and then began to
dance. He used various gestures of his hands and feet to convey the wisdom of
the yagna that escaped the yajamanas, that the yagna existed to satisfy the
yearnings of those around them, not to create monsters to defend themselves.
A similar story is found in the Bhagavat Purana, where Krishna, while
tending to his cows, comes upon a few yajamanas performing yagna and asks
them for food. They ignore him. So he goes to their wives and the yagna-patnis
feed him all the offerings they had prepared for the yagna. The yajamanas are
furious but then realize that their wives look content, while they feel angry and
frustrated. The yagna had yielded results for their wives, not them, for the yagna-
patnis had fed the hungry and discovered the true meaning of the yagna.

Arjuna, like a well surrounded by water, hymns and rituals are of no


value to the one who has understood the meaning.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 2, Verse 46 (paraphrased).

Human hunger is not just about food. We seek emotional and intellectual
nourishment too. We seek meaning, validation, significance, value, purpose,
power and understanding. We seek ideas about wealth, power, relationships and
existence. We seek entertainment. We seek food to liberate us from the fear of
the predator, security to liberate us from the fear of the prey and meaning to
liberate us from the fear of invalidation. This transforms every meeting into an
exchange. Lovemaking is yagna. Child-bearing is yagna. Child-rearing is yagna.
Feeding is yagna. Teaching is yagna. Service is yagna. War is also yagna.
Exchange can be used to satisfy our desires, or repay our debts. It can entrap us,
or liberate us. It depends not on the action, but on the thought underlying the
action.

A wish (sankalpa) always precedes a yagna. It is about asking for whom are
we performing the action: for the benefit of the self (aham) or the benefit of the
other (para)? Who is the beneficiary (aradhya)? And who is merely the
instrument (nimitta)? In nishkama karma, the devata is the aradhya and the
yajamana is the nimitta.

Approach to Exchange

In the Ramayana, disruption happens because characters act for their own
pleasure at the cost of others and resolution follows when Vishnu acts for the
pleasure of others, not his own. It is Dasharatha’s desire for sons, Kaikeyi’s
desire for the kingdom, Surpanakha’s desire for pleasure and Ravana’s desire for
domination that cause disruption. Ram works not for his personal happiness, but
the happiness of Ayodhya. In the Mahabharata, it is Shantanu’s desire for a
young wife, Dhritarashtra’s desire for the throne and Yudhishtira’s desire not to
lose a gamble that causes disruption. Krishna works not for his personal
happiness, but for the happiness of the Kurus.
Krishna asks Arjuna to fight the war not for his own sake but for the sake of
others. He has to consider himself merely the instrument, for the karma-bija of
the war has already been sown and the karma-phala of carnage is inevitable.

Arjuna, I am time that destroys worlds. Even without you, these warriors
are doomed to die. So arise and fight; destroy your opponents and claim
your success. It is I who has already killed them. Make yourself merely
my instrument.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11, verses 32 and 33
(paraphrased).

To do yagna is to recognize that we live in a sea of assumed


expectations and obligations. You and I can hoard, grab, give in order to
get, get before giving or simply withdraw from the exchange. We can
act out of desire, duty or care. We can choose to expect or control
outcome, or not.
8.
You and I withdraw in fear

What stops us from empathizing and exchanging? What makes us want to


control the other, or simply withdraw, find peace in the isolation of the cave?
The process of discovering the source of disconnection is called yoga, though
the word yoga itself means ‘to connect’. It involves moving through the many
containers that constitute deha in order to discover dehi. Krishna starts speaking
of yoga in Chapter 5 of The Gita, elaborating it further in Chapter 6. Yoga is
what we will explore in this chapter. With this, we move from the outer social
world to the inner psychological world, from karma yoga to bhakti yoga.

Each of the eighteen chapters of The Gita is titled ‘yoga’. These are then
bunched together to give us three types of yoga: behavioural (karma), emotional
(bhakti) and intellectual or cognitive (gyana). So what does the word ‘yoga’
exactly mean?
Colloquially, Indians use the word ‘jog’ for yoga. In astrology, jog means
alignment of the stars that results in favourable conditions for an activity. From
jog comes the word ‘jogadu’, the resourceful individual, a word typically used in
the eastern parts of India for one who is able to create alignment and connections
in a world full of misalignment and disconnections. The word ‘jogadu’ has given
rise to the words ‘jugad’ and ‘jugadu’ in the northern parts of India, where it
means improvisation and even by-passing the system. Sadly, today, jugad is used
in a negative sense, for it is practised for the self at the cost of the other, in the
spirit of adharma, not dharma.
The word ‘yoga’ has its roots in the sound ‘yuj’ which means to yoke, like a
horse to a chariot. The word ‘vi-yoga’ refers to disconnection or separation.
Thus, ‘yoga’ has something to with binding things together, or connecting
things.
Traditionally, yoga has been used as a complement to sankhya. Sankhya
means enumeration and refers to analysis, the tendency to break things down
into their constituent parts. Yoga is its complement and refers to synthesis, the
tendency to bind parts to establish a composite whole. In art, sankhya is
visualized as an axe (parashu), used to slice things into parts, while yoga is
visualized as a string (pasha), used to tie things together. Ganesha, the scribe of
the Mahabharata—and hence The Gita—holds these symbols in his hands to
remind all of these two techniques of enquiry. Krishna uses both sankhya and
yoga to solve Arjuna’s problem. He establishes boundaries using sankhya and
then dissolves them all using yoga.

Arjuna, practise yoga with conviction and without dismay, for it will
connect you with that from which you are disconnected, and unhook you
from your sorrow. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, Verse 23
(paraphrased).

Analysis and Synthesis

Nature is full of discrete units: planets, stars, rocks, rivers, plants, animals
and humans. These units are naturally drawn together or pulled apart by certain
forces of attraction or repulsion. In the physical world, these forces have been
observed at inter-planetary as well as sub-atomic levels. In the biological world,
they manifest as animals seeking opportunity, such as food and mates, and
shunning threats, such as rivals and predators. This attraction (raga) and
repulsion (dvesha) is part of life.

Raga–Dvesha

Yoga enables us to be aware of these natural forces of attraction and


repulsion, and not be swept away by them. Krishna equates the senses to cows
(indriya-go-chara) that graze on the pasture made of various kinds of stimuli.
Yoga turns our mind into the cowherd who determines what the senses should or
should not graze upon. Thus, yoga has much to do with the mind, and it
complements yagna that has much to do with society. Yagna is the outer
journey, while yoga is the inner journey that Arjuna has to undertake.

Yoga and Yagna

Arjuna feels that if he withdraws from the battle, all problems will be
resolved and there will be peace. However, not fighting a war does not tackle the
underlying hunger and fear. It simply denies and suppresses the hunger and fear
and the consequent rage, which then ends up festering secretly as people
‘pretend’, awaiting to explode more intensely at a later date. Outer peace does
not guarantee inner peace. Further, it does not take into consideration the other’s
thoughts and feelings. Arjuna’s desire for peace, howsoever noble, may not be
shared by Bhima or Duryodhana, who are ready for war. Forcing his noble view
on them would be judgement, devoid of empathy, hence adharma. Arjuna may
not want to do yagna, but he cannot stop others from doing so. Our decision to
act or not act cannot be insensitive to the feelings of those around us. Hence, any
discussion on yagna is complemented with discussions on yoga. While yagna
focusses on tangible giving and getting, yoga focusses on discovering intangible
thoughts and emotions of the yajamana as well as the devata, the boundaries that
we create and use to include some as family and exclude others as enemy.

Arjuna, your mind is your friend and your enemy. If you control the
mind, it is your friend. If your mind controls you, it is your enemy.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, verses 5 and 6 (paraphrased).

Mind of the Yajamana and the Devata

The value of the mind slowly amplifies as The Gita progresses. In Chapter 3
of The Gita, Arjuna asks whether Krishna values knowledge over action.
Krishna replies that he values informed action. In Chapter 5 of The Gita, Arjuna
asks if Krishna values action over renunciation. Krishna replies that he values
detached action. Informing the mind about the exchange and detaching action
from the expectation of results demand that Arjuna take an inner journey.

Arjuna, the exchange of knowledge is greater than the exchange of


things for ultimately all exchange culminates in the mind.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 33 (paraphrased).

Krishna introduces yoga as an inner yagna, where we are our own yajamana
and devata, our own beneficiary and instrument. We choose our stimulus. We
choose our response. Here, the fire is not in the altar outside, but can be our
body, our senses, our mind, even our breath and our digestive fire.

Arjuna, there is yagna everywhere, where offerings are made to various


fires. Worldly stimuli can be offered to the sensory fires. The sensory
experience can be offered to the mental fire. The mental understanding
can be offered to the wisdom fire. Breath is offered to the fire of life, as
is food. Fasting is offered to the fire of restraint.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 4, verses 26 to 28 (paraphrased).
Patanjali, in his Yoga-sutra, written around the time of The Gita, defines
yoga as stopping the rippling and twisting of the mind (chitta-vritti-nirodha)
caused by various experiences and memories that result in disconnection. He
gives an eight-step process to stop the ripples and untwist the mind, so as to
restore connection. With each step we move inwards through the containers that
constitute the body.
With yama, we limit social engagements by not indulging in sex, violence,
falsehood, theft and greed. Then, with niyama, we discipline ourselves by
practising cleanliness, contentment, austerity, reflection and having faith in
divinity. Third comes asana, where we activate the body using various postures.
Fourth is pranayama, through which we regulate the breath. With pratyahara, we
withdraw from sensory inputs. With dharana, we become aware of the big
picture and gain perspective. With dhyana, we become attentive and focussed.
With samadhi, we go further within, experience our emotions and discover fear!
Patanjali's Yoga

Fear (bhaya) is a neuro-biological fact. It is the first emotion that manifests


with the arrival of life. It is a critical emotion, essential in the struggle for life.
For it evokes hunger (kshudha) and makes the organism seek food (bhog) to
nourish itself.
Fear of death by starvation makes trees grow, seek out and grab sunlight as
well as water and nutrients from the soil, so that they can nourish themselves.
This same fear makes animals wander endlessly in search of pasture and prey,
and form packs that collaborate to increase the chances of finding food. Fear of
being killed makes the prey shun the predator, and form herds to increase the
chances of survival. Then there is the fear of losing food to a rival that makes
animals compete. Fear of dying also creates the restless urge to undertake extra
efforts to find a mate, reproduce and risk death to raise an offspring, so at least a
part of the creature outlives death.
In humans, the fear is amplified by imagination. We can imagine hunger, our
hunger and the hunger of those around us, current and future hunger, and so our
quest for food is insatiable. We can imagine predators and so feel insecure all the
time. This amplified fear goads human imagination to invent various physical
and social instruments to create excess food, distribute and secure it; and
themselves.
The greatest human fear is validation. We seek meaning (artha): who are
we? What is our role in the world? Surely we are not just animals—predator,
prey, rival or mate? This fear gives rise to the notion of property and to
hierarchies in society. Out of fear, we do not share. Due to fear, we fight over
property.
Fear crumples our mind (chitta), knots it, twists it, creates ripples and waves
and eventually wrinkles our mind. These wrinkles in the mind are called
impressions (samskaras). They appeared with the first experience of fear in the
first living organisms. The experience of all feeders and food, every plant and
animal, has been stacked up over millions of years. The crumpling has been
intensified by imagination (manas). It causes disconnection. The frightened,
hence crumpled, hence disconnected, mind is referred to as aham. The mind that
is not crumpled, hence connected, is referred to as atma. Yoga is about un-
crumpling and reconnecting, moving from aham to atma.

Aham to Atma

The Gita reveals a familiarity with all the practices referred to in the Yoga-
sutra. Krishna speaks of using the breath to make the journey from the outside to
the inside.

Arjuna, ignore the onslaught of external stimuli and focus between your
eyebrows, regulating inhalation and exhalation at the nostrils, to liberate
yourself from fear, desire and anger, and discover me within you, I who
receive and consume every offering of your yagnas.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 5, verses 27 to 29 (paraphrased).
There is reference to meditation in The Gita: sitting still and calming the
mind until one’s breath is natural and rhythmic.

Arjuna, sit still on a mat that is neither too high nor too low. Your head,
neck and back aligned, still your senses, focus your mind, gazing at the
nose-tip.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, verses 11 to 13 (paraphrased).

The point is to make one's way through the turbulence of the mind and
discover the tranquillity beyond.

Arjuna, use your mind to ignore sensory stimuli, outgrow that desire,
disconnect from intelligent arguments and ideas, rein in the restless
fickle wandering emotions, expand your mind and discover the
tranquillity within. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, verses 24 to 27
(paraphrased).

And having once realized the fear within, the yogi is able to see the fear
without, in others around, in individuals as well as in the collective, for he is
connected.

Arjuna, those connected see everything equally, for they discover me


everywhere, in everyone and everything. They always see me, and I see
them. They always establish me everywhere. I am always established in
them.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, verses 29 to 31 (paraphrased).

This is where The Gita departs from the Yoga-sutra. While the Yoga-sutra
speaks of samadhi as complete withdrawal from the material world, Krishna’s
Gita speaks of samadhi very differently, as the ability to see the world with
perfect equanimity, without judgement.

Arjuna, one who has attained samadhi is not disturbed by unhappiness,


nor does he crave happiness. He is not consumed by craving, fear or
anger. He is at peace in pleasant and unpleasant circumstances. He is
content in wisdom.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, verses 55 to 56
(paraphrased).
This divergence from the Yoga-sutra is not surprising, as mythological tales
inform us that Patanjali was a serpent who overheard Shiva revealing the secret
of yoga to Shakti. Shiva is a hermit. His path is suitable for the tapasvi who does
not wish to engage with the world. Krishna speaks to the yajamana, the
householder, and the whole point of yoga is to facilitate engagement with the
world. If the tapasvi is focussed on the inner journey, and if the yajamana is
focussed on the outer journey, then the yogi takes the inner journey in order to
be better at the outer journey.

Arjuna, the yogi is far superior to a hermit who withdraws from the
world, to a scholar who understands everything but does nothing, or a
householder who does everything without understanding.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 6, Verse 46 (paraphrased).

Patanjali

Yoga brings awareness and attention to fear. By recognizing the reality of


his own fears, the yogi is able to appreciate the fears of those around him. He
observes why he withdraws and why those around him withdraw. He does not
seek to amplify fear by trying to control people. He works towards comforting
them, enabling them to outgrow their fear. Thus is born empathy and the ability
to let go. The yajamana performs nishkama karma.

A yogi looks within to appreciate the mind that occupies the body, the
thoughts that occupy the mind, the fears that occupy the thoughts, the
opportunities and threats that occupy the fears, and the fears of others
that occupy those opportunities and those threats.
9.
You and I hesitate to trust

Connecting with the other is not easy, especially when we look upon each other
as predator or prey, rival or mate. In such a situation we trust no one but
ourselves, as animals tend to do. Or we trust the other only in situations of
extreme helplessness, as only humans can. Thus, we become asuras and devas.
Krishna discusses the difference between the two in Chapter 16 of The Gita, but
we discuss it much earlier in My Gita as we need to understand ‘gods’ before we
plunge into conversations about ‘God’. These beings are not ‘out there’ in the
world, but very much ‘in here’ in our minds.

The words ‘deva’ and ‘asura’ refer to divinities in the Veda, and are roughly
translated as gods and demons, but Krishna uses them differently. A deva is one
who accepts the reality of atma; an asura does not. Thus, Krishna sees devas and
asuras not in supernatural terms or as inherently good or evil, but as people who
value the dehi and those who don’t, respectively. The asuras are trapped by the
literal and the measurable, while the devas appreciate the metaphorical and the
non-measurable. Those who do not look beyond the body and material reality,
says Krishna, have no hope of freedom, despite any material accomplishments.

Arjuna, those who think as devas do are eventually liberated and those
who think as asuras do are forever trapped. Fear not, you think like a
deva.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 16, Verse 5 (paraphrased).
While asuras are equated with non-believers (nastikas) and devas with
believers (astika), the split is not so simple. Devas may believe, but do they
experience?

Non-Belief, Belief, Experience

The Gita presents atma as a fact, hence in Chapter 17, Verse 23, the phrase
‘om tat sat’ is used, which roughly translates as ‘that which is forever true’. It is
the closest we get to the definitive article ‘the’ in Sanskrit. This fact, however,
can never be measured, therefore from a scientific point of view it can never be
proven. It can, however, be experienced (anu-bhava). Believing is a cognitive
process, an acceptance of a conceptual truth. Experience is an emotional process,
the journey from the head to the heart. To enable anu-bhava, one has to
simultaneously perform the inner journey of yoga and the outer journey of
yagna.

Arjuna, those who cleanse themselves with contemplation and


meditation discover me, embrace me, find shelter in me and are liberated
from yearning, fear and anger.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 10
(paraphrased).

Two thousand years ago, hermits (shramanas) popularized the practice of


yoga, but they did not care so much for the outer journey of yagna. They valued
the inner fire of the mind (tapa), not the outer fire (agni) of the altar. While the
word tapasya is used interchangeably with yoga, tapasya refers to the inner
journey, while yoga refers to the inner journey that eventually leads to an outer
journey. The hermits were tapasvis, who valued meditation and contemplation,
not exchange. They can thus be differentiated from the yogis, who valued
meditation and contemplation as well as exchange. Hermits valued withdrawal
over engagement, celibacy over marriage, isolation over union and zero (shunya)
over infinity (ananta). In other words, hermits caused a rupture between the inner
and outer journeys.
Rupture of the Inner and Outer Journey

In the Puranas, this rupture is made explicit. The devas prefer yagna but not
tapasya. The asuras prefer tapasya but not yagna. Both are the children of
Brahma. Indra, leader of the devas, who is not committed to the inner journey, is
eternally insecure: he fears those who perform yagna and tapasya, and considers
them as rivals. So he disrupts the yagna of kings by stealing their horses. He
sends damsels known as apsaras to enchant sages immersed in tapasya and
irritates them by seducing their neglected wives. Asuras, on the other hand, are
visualized as performing tapasya and obtaining, from Brahma, many powers that
overpower Indra. Thus, devas are portrayed as entitled, insecure beings while
asuras are portrayed as deprived, angry beings. Though half-brothers, these sons
of Brahma do not like each other: the devas fear the asuras and the asuras hate
the devas.

Stealing Horses, Seeking Brahma's Help and Sending Damsels

In the Vedas, the devas and asuras are celestial beings. But in the Puranas,
they are clearly rivals. The Europeans identified asuras first as Titans, in line
with Greek mythology, and later as demons, in line with Abrahamic mythology.
This causes great confusion, as the asuras are neither ‘old gods’ nor ‘forces of
evil’. Both old gods and forces of evil are unwanted and need to be excluded,
while in the Puranas, both are needed to churn the ocean of milk, and draw out
its treasures. Since the devas were visualized as being surrounded by affluence
and abundance in swarga, they were naturally preferred over the asuras as the
devas had a lot that they could give, if made happy, while the asuras had
nothing.
The visualization of asuras either as villains, anti-heroes or even wronged
heroes persists even today amongst writers on mythology, who see asuras as old
tribal units overrun, even enslaved and demonized, by yagna-performing Vedic
people. Asuras are even seen as embodiments of our negative impulses and
devas as personifying positive impulses. We overlook the fact that in popular
Hinduism neither devas nor asuras are given the same status as ishwara or
bhagavan. We need to see devas and asuras as our emotions that prevent us from
completing the outer and inner journeys.
Puranic stories typically begin with Indra not paying attention to the yagna
while an asura is deep in tapasya. Indra’s power thus wanes while the asura’s
power waxes. The asura is able to invoke Brahma and get boons from him, using
which he attacks, defeats and drives the devas out of their paradise, swarga.
Dispossessed, Indra and the devas go to Brahma, not for boons but for help.
Brahma then directs them either to Shiva, Vishnu or the Goddess, who form the
foundation of the three major theistic schools of Hinduism.
In many ways, these stories echo the history of Indian thought: the decline of
the yagna rituals of Vedic times, the rising popularity of monastic orders that
practise tapasya, and eventually the triumph of theistic traditions. They also
reflect the rise of the ritual known as ‘puja’ that forces the devotee to look at the
divinity outside himself through images in the other, thus enabling the yoga of
the self with the world around.

Rediscovery of Atma
Puja

It is significant to note that the asuras seek Brahma’s boons and the devas
seek Brahma’s help. The asuras are not interested in Brahma; only in his
possessions. They perform tapasya not to attain wisdom that takes away
insecurity, but to simply acquire powers known as siddhis. The devas are
interested in Brahma and are directed to Shiva, Vishnu and the Goddess, a
calling for the inner journey that grants wisdom, hence takes away insecurity.
But the devas do not complete this inner journey.
As the Puranas remind us repeatedly, after either of the gods or the Goddess
vanquishes the asura and Indra gets back his paradise, he goes back to his old
ways, feeling entitled and finding joy in material things, getting insecure with
yajamanas who do too much yagna and tapasvis who do too much tapasya,
unable to enjoy his prosperity as he feels his paradise is under siege, much like
successful people in the world today, who think of God only in bad times and
forget about God in good times. For them God is all about their own fortune, not
everybody’s fortune. For them there is no God within who enables the world
without.
The asura is one who is striving for success. The deva is one who is, or has
been, successful. A determination to be successful drives the asura to do tapasya.
Fear of losing what they have or fear of never getting back what they lost makes
the devas seek Brahma. The asura does not believe that anyone will help him.
The deva believes that God exists only to help him while he does not exist to
help anyone. In other words, the asura does not believe in atma whereas the deva
believes in param-atma, but has yet to realize jiva-atma, the human potential.
The description of the condition of the asuras in The Gita is brutal and
resonates with what we see in the world around us, where great value is placed
on what you achieve and what you possess.
Arjuna, asuras will say 'This I have gained, that desire of mine I have
satisfied, that enemy of mine I have destroyed, by any means available; I
am the master, the enjoyer, the successful, the strong, the happy; I am
rich and I will donate; there is none like me.' Thus ensnared in his own
net, addicted to satisfying his insatiable desire, he tumbles into a hell of
conceit and envy and rage; born again and again in similar wombs;
trapped in the same context. Seeking more, getting angry when he does
not get what he seeks and seeking more when he gets what he seeks, he
is unable to escape the darkness and find the light of happiness.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 16, verses 12 to 22 (paraphrased).

The description above seems like judgement, or a wish, but is in fact


observation: the inevitable outcome of what happens when we believe material
things will bring us satisfaction, when we see humans as bodies who perform
and accumulate, when we see the world in technocratic terms, devoid of
meaning and a larger narrative. We expect things to give us pleasure but instead
they fuel more yearnings, thus creating addiction, which fuels greed. We want
more and more, and feel angry when we don’t get what we desire.

Swarga, Pa-tala and Naraka

In the Puranas, the residence of the asuras is called pa-tala, the subterranean
realm; this is where they belong, just as the devas belong in the celestial realm,
the sky above. But in The Gita, the residence of the asuras is called naraka, or
hell. Pa-tala is a physical description but naraka is a psychological description:
lack of faith results in hopelessness and rage and hence creates hell.
Victory over the devas does not bring the asuras satisfaction. Victory over
the asuras does not provide enlightenment to the devas. Both are trapped in a
merry-go-round, unable to break free. Yet, Vishnu ascribes greater value to the
devas over the asuras, for the former look beyond the material, for some time at
least. Both the Pandavas and the Kauravas are fighting over property, but at least
Arjuna is listening to possibilities beyond.

Cycle of Victories and Defeats

Yagna of the devas is good, as it forces us to look at the param-atma outside.


Tapasya of the asuras is good, as it makes us discover the jiva-atma inside. But
we need the two to inform each other. Only yagna is action without
understanding. Only tapasya is understanding without action. When
understanding impacts action and action impacts understanding, then it is yoga.

Arjuna, yoga will enable you to perform action without expectation, and
look upon success and failure equally. Action focussed on intent is better
than action focussed on outcome. Such action liberates you from all
dualities, so improve your skills with yoga.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2,
verses 48 to 50 (paraphrased).

We all ride waves of fortune and misfortune. If you and I believe we


alone control the waves, then we are asuras. If you and I feel entitled in
fortune and remember God only in misfortune or in fear of misfortune,
then we are devas. We are not yet in touch with the atma within and
without.
10.
You and I have potential

We mistrust fellow humans and so yearn for something beyond humanity,


someone who comforts us, indulges our hungers, our insecurities and our
inadequacies, without judgement. And so, two thousand years ago, The Gita
introduced Hinduism to the concept of bhagavan that consolidates and
personifies earlier, rather abstract, notions of divinity, such as brahmana,
purusha and atma. This theme, elaborated from chapters 7 to 12 of The Gita, is
what makes the Bhagavad Gita remarkable, challenging the ritual nature of the
Vedas, the intellectual nature of the Upanishads and acknowledging the role of
emotions in our life. We are not rational creatures who feel; we are emotional
creatures who rationalize.

In The Gita, the idea of God begins in Chapter 2 itself, when Krishna identifies
himself as a tool to tame the senses.

Arjuna, the sage focusses on me to tame his senses and discover


wisdom.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 60 (paraphrased).

But the real discussion on God starts when, after having heard Krishna speak
of yagna and yoga, Arjuna expresses his discomfort with introspection and the
inner journey.
Krishna, I feel the promise of sustaining equanimity through yoga is not
easy as the mind is restless, fickle, turbulent like the wind while the
senses are fixed and anchored.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 6, verses 33
and 34 (paraphrased).

Arjuna’s honest admission reveals how it is not enough to simply instruct a


seeker or student. Unless the heart feels secure, the head will never receive new
ideas. Arjuna needs an anchor, a support, someone to lean on, the comforting
hand of God. And so Krishna introduces himself as God: the invisible beyond
the visible, the immortal beyond the mortal, the infinite beyond the finite, the
metaphor beyond the literal. The idea of Krishna as God accelerates from
Chapter 7 through chapters 8, 9 and 10 until there is a veritable explosion in
Chapter 11, which leaves no doubt in Arjuna’s mind that Krishna is indeed God.
The word used for God in The Gita is bhagavan, a departure from the word
‘devas’ used in the Vedas. The word ‘bhagavata’ was used in Vedic times to
mean ‘benefactor’ or ‘bearer of fortune’, a title for kings and sages. But The Gita
transformed it. Thus, 2,000 years ago, it came to refer to God, especially
visualized as Krishna or Vishnu, marking a shift in the dominant theme of
Hinduism. While every living creature is apportioned a slice of reality that is its
lot in life, God is master of every slice.
When the Europeans came to India, they tried long and hard to equate the
devas of the Vedas with the Greek gods and the bhagavan of The Gita and the
Puranas with the Abrahamic God. They argued that just as Christians had shifted
from polytheism to monotheism thanks to Christianity, Hindus did so thanks to
The Gita. But such forced comparisons failed, as the lines between polytheism
and monotheism were blurred in Hinduism. While the Abrahamic God expressly
considers Greek gods to be false, the Puranic bhagavan sees the devas as a part
of his being. This is not appropriation or inclusion; this is evolution, a journey
from the limited to the limitless. It is also a journey from the physical to the
psychological. God is not ‘out there’; God is also ‘in us’ and ‘in others’.
The Hindu God resists the finiteness of history and geography that attracted
Western mythologies, but embraces the infinity offered by psychology, a subject
that Europeans took seriously only in the twentieth century after the works of
Freud and Jung.

Arjuna, at the end of many lives, the rare wise man finally realizes:
Krishna is everything.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7, Verse 19
(paraphrased).
Greek mythology had no concept of a singular almighty God. It had many
gods. First, there were the Titans who violently separated the earth goddess,
Gaia, from the sky god, Uranus, and became the rulers of the world. Then came
the Olympians, the children of the Titans, who overthrew them. The Olympians
feared that the humans would overthrow them, and so kept them in place through
the Fates. But occasionally, grudgingly, they admired a truly independent and
defiant being: the hero, whom they gave a special place in the afterlife. The
pattern here is overpowering, absorbing and appropriating the conquered. This
mythology also shaped the worldview of the Romans who controlled the
Mediterranean 2,000 years ago.

Greek gods

But then 1,700 years ago, in order to unify an increasingly divided empire,
the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and rejected all old
gods in favour of the God of Abraham, who allowed worship of none other but
Him. This God of Abraham was the creator of the world, distinct from the world
He had created, who laid down rules of how humans should behave if they
wished to return to heaven. This idea formed the basis of Islam as well. But the
Muslims rejected the Christian claim that Jesus was the Son of God; they
believed that Jesus was a prophet, like Abraham and Moses before him, but the
final prophet who really mattered was Muhammad. The question of who is the
true prophet continues to divide those who subscribe to Abrahamic mythology.
Abrahamic God

The God of Abrahamic mythology is constantly described as jealous and


possessive, someone who does not tolerate false gods. The God of Hindu
mythology does not create such divisions, and is seen present in diverse local
and folk deities, who serve as portals of a larger singular divine entity.
One can say that the Abrahamic idea of God seeks purity, and so shuns
contamination by the ‘false’, while the Hindu idea of God seeks completeness,
and so keeps including many incomplete ideas of the divine in the journey
towards infinity. This could account for why the legacy of pre-Christian Europe,
America and Arabia has been completely wiped out or hidden, while various
Vedic, pre-Vedic, post-Vedic and extra-Vedic practices continue to thrive and
influence each other in India, under the large umbrella term called Hinduism.

Arjuna, those who exchange knowledge in order to venerate me,


discover me inside themselves or outside, in multiple forms or as a
singular universal whole. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 9, Verse 15
(paraphrased).

The earliest word for God in the Rig Veda is ‘ka’, which is the first alphabet
in Sanskrit, from which come all the interrogative pronouns such as what, when,
where, why, how. Thus, divinity had something to do with enquiry. The kavi, or
poet, enquired about ka. He later came to be known as the rishi, the observer.
The rishis also used the word ‘brahmana’ to refer to divinity. The earliest
meaning of brahmana is language—for it is through language that humans make
sense of the world around them. In fact, language is what gives humans their
humanity and distinguishes them from animals that communicate observation,
but have no language to analyse and contemplate abstract thoughts. Brahmana
also means expanding the mind, for language expands the mind.
The Vedic rituals invoke one purusha, a multi-headed and multi-limbed
being, who permeates every aspect of the cosmos and whose division creates the
world. In the Aranyakas, early speculative texts, there is reference to prajapati,
the mind-seed whose union with matter-womb creates the diverse world. Thus,
division, and union, of divinity lead to creation. In the Upanishads, later
speculative texts, brahmana, purusha and prajapati are equated with atma, the
immortal, located inside all beings as jiva-atma, and around all beings as para-
atma. If jiva-atma is what one is and para-atma is what the other is, then param-
atma is what one and the other can become. The identification of God with
humanity starts being passionately debated. From an abstract and mystical
concept, God increasingly becomes a psychological concept.

History of Hindu God

Two thousand years ago, in the Puranas, divinity was finally personified and
given the form that we are very familiar with now. In fact, The Gita plays a key
role in the shift. In the pre-Gita period, God was a concept. In the post-Gita
period, God became a character in human affairs.
The old abstract words—purusha, brahmana, prajapati, atma— were
gradually overshadowed by two new words: ishwara and bhagavan. Ishwara
referred to the seed of divinity and bhagavan referred to the fully developed tree
of divinity, laden with fruits and flowers. Ishwara is associated with Shiva, the
hermit, whose marriage to Shakti creates the world. Bhagavan is associated with
Vishnu, the householder, whose awakening results in creation and whose
slumber results in dissolution. Between awakening and sleeping, Vishnu takes
many forms to walk the earth, including that of Krishna. The Puranic Shiva and
Vishnu presuppose the existence of the Goddess, who is nature, hence mother of
humanity, as well as culture, daughter of humanity.
Ishwara, Bhagavan and Shakti

The God of Abrahamic mythology shies away from form. The God of Hindu
mythology is both formless (nir-guna-brahman) and embodied (sa-guna-
brahman), as described in Chapter 12 of The Gita. Without form, He is neither
male nor female. With form, He may be birth-less and deathless, as in the case of
Shiva, Vishnu and the Goddess, who are described as self-created (swayam-bhu)
and not born from the womb (a-yonija). Or He may experience birth and death,
as any womb-born (yonija), as in the case of Ram and Krishna.
Though formless, the God of Abrahamic mythology is addressed, even
visualized, in masculine terms. The God of Hindu mythology is visualized as
sometimes male, sometimes female, sometimes both and sometimes neither.
Thus, Krishna refers, in Chapter 7, Verse 6, to the world of matter and mind as
his two wombs (yoni), while also speaking of how he places his seed in the
womb of Brahma, in Chapter 14, Verse 3. Krishna also describes himself in
feminine terms. In Chapter 10, he identifies himself as the Ganga River and the
wish-fulfilling cow Kamadhenu. Naturally, in Maharashtra, the poet-saints had
no problem referring to the local form of Krishna, Vitthal, as Vittha-ai or Mother
Vitthal.
The God of Abrahamic mythology has no family or any such human
relationships. In Christian mythology, He has a son, but no wife. The God of
Hinduism is visualized as a householder who deals with mundane human issues
in temples and tales. Although the word ‘brahma’ remains sacred throughout
Hinduism, referring to the divine potential in all things, the god Brahma in the
Puranas is not worshipped, as he is visualized as the unenlightened householder,
who seeks to control the Goddess, chasing her relentlessly against her will, and
so loses a head to Shiva. Shiva is worshipped as the enlightened hermit who is
turned into an enlightened householder by the Goddess. Vishnu is worshipped as
the enlightened householder who takes responsibility for the Goddess and adopts
various forms to protect her while she provides for him, becoming Ram when
she is Sita, and Krishna when she is Radha, Satyabhama and Draupadi.

Hindu Trinity

From Chapter 7 of The Gita, the idea of God takes centre stage.

Arjuna, your senses experience eight parts of my manifested form: the


five elements, emotions, intelligence and identity. Beyond is my
unmanifested form, that supports all this as a string holds a necklace of
pearls together.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7, verses 4 to 7
(paraphrased).

In Chapter 8, Krishna connects the impersonal mind (brahman) and


impersonal matter (adi-bhuta) to the personal mind (adhyatma) and the personal
body (adi-daiva), via impersonal action (karma) and personal connection (adi-
yagna). Thus, divinity is connected with the individual, param-atma with jiva-
atma. Krishna declares himself as the ultimate source and destination of all
things, from where all things come and to which they return.

Arjuna, at the hour of death, he whose mind is yoked by devotion, breath


stilled, attention focussed, thinks of me, comes to me.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 8, Verse 6 (paraphrased).

In Chapter 9, Krishna says that he is accessible to all, even those considered


bad or inferior.

Arjuna, even those you consider villains should be respected if you find
them walking my path, for they too will eventually find peace and joy.
None of my devotees are lost, not even those generally held in disdain
by the royal warriors: women, traders, labourers and servants, even those
considered illegitimate.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 9, verses 30 to 32
(paraphrased).

In Chapter 10, Krishna says that he is present in all things, manifesting as


excellence.

Arjuna, I am the life existing in all things. I am the beginning, the


middle and the end. Amongst Adityas, I am Vishnu; amongst lights, the
sun; amongst winds, the mirage; amongst constellations, the moon;
amongst the books of knowledge, the melodies; amongst devas, Indra;
amongst senses, the mind; amongst organisms, the awareness; amongst
rudras, Shiva; amongst yakshas and rakshasas, Kubera; amongst
elements, fire; amongst mountains, Meru; amongst priests, Brihaspati;
amongst commanders, Kartikeya; amongst waterbodies, the ocean;
amongst seers, Bhrigu; amongst chants, aum; amongst rituals, recitation;
amongst the immobile, the Himalayas; amongst trees, the fig; amongst
messengers, Narada; amongst gandharvas, Chitraratha; amongst yogis,
Kapila; amongst horses, Uchhaishrava; amongst elephants, Airavata;
amongst people, the leader; amongst weapons, the thunderbolt; amongst
cows, the wish-fulfilling cow; amongst lovers, Kama; amongst earthly
serpents, Vasuki; amongst celestial serpents, Ananta; amongst ocean-
dwellers, Varuna; amongst forefathers, Aryaman; amongst regulators,
Yama; amongst asuras, Prahalada; amongst reckoners, Yama; amongst
beasts, the lion; amongst birds, the eagle; amongst cleansers, the wind;
amongst warriors, Ram; amongst fish, the dolphin; amongst rivers,
Ganga; amongst metres, Gayatri; amongst months, December; amongst
seasons, spring; amongst deception, gambling; amongst my people, me;
amongst your people, you; amongst storytellers, Vyasa; amongst poets,
Shukra. I am the staff of the guardians, the strategy of the ambitious, the
silence of secrets, the wisdom of the wise. I am the seed, without me
there can be no element, no plant, no animal. There is no end to my
manifestations. These are but samples of infinity—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 10, verses 20 to 40 (paraphrased).

In Chapter 11, Krishna shows his expansive form (virat-swarup), on


Arjuna’s request and Arjuna discovers God as the infinite container (vishwa-
rupa), cause and consequence of all things, at all times, and more.

Arjuna, behold my forms, hundreds, thousands, of myriad colours and


shapes. Behold the thirty-three Vedic gods: eight vasus, twelve adityas,
eleven maruttas, two ashwins and many more things never known
before. See the entire universe in my body, the animate and the
inanimate. Let me give you special eyes so that you can see this special
sight.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11, verses 5 to 8 (paraphrased).

After Krishna describes himself, Sanjaya describes what Arjuna saw.

King, so saying, that great master of yoga revealed his divine form to
Arjuna. Many mouths, many eyes, many adornments, many weapons,
facing all directions, brilliant as a thousand suns rising, thus did Arjuna
see the diverse world in one body. His hair stood on end and he bowed
reverentially.’—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11, verses 9 to 14
(paraphrased).

And finally, Arjuna describes what he sees.

Krishna, I see you and in you all deities, serpents, sages and Brahma
seated on a lotus. You are everywhere, resplendent, the original one, the
goal, the anchor, the defender, without beginning, middle or end, of
infinite arms and of infinite strength. The sun and moon are your eyes,
blazing, fire in your mouth, filling the void between earth and sky with
your infinite limbs, infinite trunks. All beings enter you, admire you,
venerate you. In your mouth, between your teeth, you grind entire
words, all warriors too, those on that side and this.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 11, verses 15 to 30 (paraphrased).

In Chapter 12, after Krishna returns to his original form, he speaks of how he
can be perceived in different forms, or even without form.

Some realize me by worshipping my form. Some realize me formless


through meditation. For most people, it is easier to worship form than
the formless.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 12, verses 2 to 5 (paraphrased).

This God of Hindu mythology, churned out of Vedic hymns, declares that
He is the very source and destination of the Vedas and everything else, in The
Gita. In other words, language reveals the idea of God and the idea of God
declares it gave birth to language. The form reveals the formless, which makes
the form meaningful. The Hindu idea of God, presented through language and
the liberal use of metaphors, is located inside humanity, not outside. It is what
makes humans yearn for, and find, meaning. It is what makes humans outgrow
fear and expand the mind to discover immortality, infinity. It is what enables
humans to care for others. It is what everyone can be. This rather psychological
understanding of God is unique to Hinduism, and distinguishes it from Western
mythologies.

I want you to be bhagavan: see my slice of reality, my insecurity and my


vulnerability, and comfort me, without making me feel small. You have
that potential. So do I. If not you and I, then surely there is somebody
else.
11.
You and I can include

To discover God within, we have to go beyond our slice of reality and appreciate
the hungers and fears of those around us. For that we have to discover
brahmana by expanding our mind, an idea that is best explored through the
character of Hanuman, the monkey god who plays a key role in the epic
Ramayana, and whose image flutters on Arjuna’s flag. Hanuman became a
popular deity in the ten centuries after the writing of The Gita, when Hindu
monastic traditions waxed while Buddhist monastic traditions waned.

Arjuna’s flag is known as kapi-dhvaja, as it has the image of a monkey (kapi) on


it. Monkeys have long represented the human mind, as like the mind they are
restless, dominating and territorial, clinging to the source of comfort, their
mother, until they grow up. Another word for kapi is va-nara, meaning less than
human. It is derived from vana-nara, meaning forest (vana) people (nara).
But the monkey atop Arjuna’s flag is no ordinary one. It is Hanuman, the
mightiest of monkeys, whose story is told in the epic, Ramayana. He is always
visualized at the feet of Ram, who appears human (nara) but is actually God
(Narayana, the refuge of nara). Nara and Narayana also refer to a pair of
inseparable Vedic sages, avatars of Vishnu. The inseparable Arjuna and Krishna
are considered Nara and Narayana reborn.
Va-nara, nara and Narayana represent three aspects of our existence: animal,
human and divine. Scientists now speak of how the human part of the brain is a
recent development and sits on top of the older animal brain. The animal brain is
rooted in fear, and focusses on survival, while the human brain is rooted in
imagination, and so seeks to understand itself by understanding nature.
Between survival and understanding comes judging—the state when
everything and everyone around is evaluated based on imagined benchmarks, in
order to position oneself. The animal wants to identify the other as predator or
prey, rival or mate. The judge wants to classify the world as good or bad,
innocent or guilty, right or wrong, oppressor or oppressed, based on his or her
own framework. The observer wants to figure out what exactly is going on.
The journey from animal to judge to observer is the journey of va-nara to
nara to Narayana. It involves the uncrumpling of aham, the frightened mind, and
the eventual discovery of atma, the secure mind. This is what it means to be
brahmana.

Expansion of Mind

The word brahmana has two roots: expansion (brah) and mind (manas). In
the Rig Veda—depending on usage—it refers to language, the power of
language to expand the mind, and the expanded mind. The student was referred
to as a brahmachari, one who was expected to behave such that his mind
expanded. Later, it came to refer to ritual manuals (brahmana texts), and
eventually to keepers of these texts (the brahmana caste, more popularly known
as Brahmins). Even later, it became a character in the Puranas, Brahma, the
creator of the world, who is so consumed by his creation that he forgets his own
identity and becomes unworthy of worship. Vishnu enables the many sons of
Brahma to expand their mind. Some succeed, some don’t. In the Ramayana,
Ram enables the transformation of Hanuman from the servant, Ram-dasa, to
Maha-bali, a deity in his own right. In the Mahabharata, Krishna struggles to
transform the Pandava brothers and partially succeeds. Unlike in Greek epics,
where the human protagonist transforms into something extraordinary, in Hindu
epics, the human protagonist is God, who enables the transformation of those
around.
The Gita uses the words ‘brahmana’ and ‘brahma’ to refer to the sacred: the
human ability to expand the mind and discover divinity and find meaning
everywhere, as elaborated in the following hymn often chanted by Hindus before
meals.

Arjuna, the one who offers food is divine, the food that is offered is
divine, the one who receives the food is divine, the one who consumes
the food is divine. Everything will surely become divine to one willing
to expand the mind.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 24
(paraphrased).

This idea takes the shape of a story in the Puranas where the people of
Ayodhya are amused to see Hanuman biting into the pearls given to him by Sita.
‘What’s the use of these pearls,’ says Hanuman, ‘if they do not contain Sita’s
Ram?’ Hanuman then tears open his chest to reveal Sita’s Ram. Hanuman thus
reveals his deep understanding of dehi—what is located within the deha. He
seeks dehi everywhere and thus expands his mind and finds brahmana.

Hanuman’s Dehi

Brahmana represents a state when humans have totally overpowered the


animal brain; in other words, outgrown fear. We do not look at the other as
predator or prey, mate or rival. We do not seek to judge the other in order to
position ourselves. Our identity is not dependent on the other. It is independent,
devoid of the need for props. We either withdraw as Shiva does, or engage as
Vishnu does, in order to enable the insecure other, who is entrapped in a
crumpled mind.
Arjuna, to expand your mind, use intelligence to draw your mind away
from sensuality, so that there is no self-obsession, aggression, arrogance,
desire, anger, possessiveness, attraction or repulsion. You are content in
solitude, consuming little, expressing little, connected with the world
and aware.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, verses 51 to 53 (paraphrased).

How will a man with expanded mind behave? We learn this from the
Ramayana, the epic that tells the story of Ram, a prince exiled to the forest
following palace intrigues. In the forest, he encounters rakshasas and vanaras,
traditionally described as demons and monkeys, essentially creatures yet to
expand their mind. The king of the rakshasas, Ravana, kidnaps Ram’s wife,
while the vanaras help him get her back.
Ravana, king of the rakshasas, is a Brahmin's son, well versed in the Vedas.
Yet he shows all traits of an alpha male such as domination and territoriality. He
makes himself king of Lanka by driving out his brother, Kubera. He tries to
make Sita his queen and is quite infuriated, and bewildered, when she rejects his
advances and stays faithful to Ram.
Sugriva, king of the vanaras, agrees to help Ram provided he helps him
overthrow Vali, who has kicked him out of the kingdom of Kishkinda, following
a misunderstanding, rather than sharing the throne, as their father wished. Ram
kills Vali, but Sugriva promptly forgets his promise, until Lakshmana threatens
him with dire consequences.
Like Ravana, Hanuman is well versed in the Veda. Like Sugriva, Hanuman
is also a vanara. But he is very different. He observes and understands. He serves
Sugriva because he is obliged to: Sugriva’s father, the sun god Surya, is his guru.
He protects Sugriva from Vali’s excesses, but does not fight Vali as Vali is no
enemy of his. Of his own volition, he serves Ram. He joins the fight against
Ravana, even though Ravana is no enemy of his, because he realizes that Ram
also does not see Ravana as his enemy. In Ram’s eyes, there are no villains, or
victims, or heroes, just humans who continue to indulge in animal-like behaviour
out of fear, thereby following adharma rather than dharma. Ram fights Ravana
because Ravana does not listen to human reason, and prefers animal force. No
one by Hanuman recognizes that Ram is no nara; he is Narayana. This discovery
enables Hanuman to expand his mind, make choices and take responsibility,
transform from animal to God. This is why there are independent temples
dedicated to Hanuman.

Arjuna, the wise let go of the fruit of action, and so break free from the
cycle of rebirths. Their wisdom cuts through formal hymns and official
words, for yoga connects them with who they really are.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 2, verses 51 to 53 (paraphrased).

When Hanuman follows Ram back to Ayodhya, he observes how Ram casts
out a pregnant Sita, following street gossip about her soiled reputation due to
contact with Ravana. But he does not judge Ram. He observes how Ram, as
scion of a royal clan, cannot break clan rules and must uphold clan reputation at
all costs. He observes how Ram never abandons his people, even though they are
being petty, nor does he try to convince them of his wife’s innocence. Ram
refuses to be Ayodhya’s judge or Sita’s lawyer. He simply refuses to remarry: he
may have abandoned the queen, but he will never abandon his wife.

Arjuna, he who sees the divine as present equally in all things does not
hurt himself by hurting others and so attains the ultimate state.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, Verse 28 (paraphrased).

Hanuman also observes how Sita refuses to return to Ram’s Ayodhya,


though not even for a moment does she doubt his love for her and her love for
him. In a world of rules, everyone makes choices and every choice has
consequences. Karma applies to Ram and Sita too. No matter what the
circumstances, neither Ram nor Sita abandons dharma. Hanuman thus realizes
what it takes to be Narayana: to be independent, yet dependable.

God's Truth

Hanuman serves Ram, God without, and discovers the God within. Krishna
serves Arjuna and displays his divine form, so that Arjuna feels reassured and
secure enough to the make the inner journey, which will enable his outer
journey.
Hanuman enters the Mahabharata when the Pandavas are in exile. Unlike
Ram who is at peace despite being exiled for no fault of his own, the Pandavas
feel like victims even though it is they who gambled away their kingdom.

Expanded Mind

Hanuman encounters Bhima as he walks through the forest like an entitled


prince, refusing to go around rocks or trees, walking straight, expecting animals
to stay clear of his path, so different from the caring and accommodating Ram.
In the form of an old monkey, Hanuman reclines on Bhima’s path and refuses to
make way. ‘Kick my tail aside and go ahead. I am too weak to move it myself.’
Bhima tries to do so, even uses all his legendary strength, but fails to move the
monkey’s tail by even an inch. Thus humbled, he recognizes the monkey is
Hanuman teaching him a lesson. Hanuman then displays his gigantic form, the
one he took to leap over the ocean to find Lanka, a reminder never to
underestimate the potential of things around.
Hanuman also encounters Arjuna just before the war, when Arjuna wonders
aloud why Ram did not build a bridge of arrows to cross the ocean into Lanka.
‘Maybe such a bridge would not hold the weight of a monkey,’ says Hanuman.
To prove him wrong Arjuna builds a bridge of arrows across the sea. As soon as
Hanuman steps on it, it collapses. This happens again and again, until Krishna
advises Arjuna to chant Ram’s name while releasing his arrows. This Arjuna
does and now the bridge is so strong that even when Hanuman takes his giant
form, the bridge does not break. Thus the power of faith in the divine is
demonstrated over skill and strength.
‘When you were Ram, I was at your feet,’ says Hanuman to Krishna. ‘Now
can I be on top of your head?’ Krishna agrees. Arjuna is shocked: a monkey on
Krishna’s head? ‘What is wrong, Arjuna?’ asks Krishna, ‘Wherefrom comes
your assumption of superiority? I sit at your feet. Can Hanuman not be atop your
head?’

Arjuna, he who does not hate anyone, is friendly and compassionate


always, is not possessive and self-indulgent, stable in pleasure and pain,
forgiving, contained, controlled and firm in his love for me, in heart and
head, is much loved by me.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 12, verses 13 and
14 (paraphrased).

The difference between the Pandavas and Ram is thus repeatedly


demonstrated. Ram is not a great king because he is a king or a hero, but because
his mind has expanded and he hates no one. The Pandavas are insecure, despite
having strength and skills, and constantly seek validation. In their fear, they fail
to see the love around. By observing Ram, Hanuman discovers the love of the
atma beyond the fears of aham. By listening to The Gita, Krishna hopes that
Arjuna will discover the same.

When I feel that you acknowledge, appreciate and accommodate my


worldview, rather than dismissing, tolerating, adoring or even following
it, I know you are expanding your mind and walking the path of
brahmana.
12.
You and I can accommodate

An expanding mind can contract to accommodate the limited view of others. A


mother, for example, can display mock rage to delight her child. Thus the limited
worldview of the child is indulged, and emotionally nourished. At the same time,
the mother is nourished by meaning and realization of potential. A healthy
relationship, like a yagna, is always two-way, not one-way. That is why an
avatar is not just a teacher or a saviour, as we shall discover through the
character of Radha, who appeared in the Hindu landscape eight centuries ago as
the flower of the Bhagavata plant whose seed was planted by The Gita. Radha
replaced devotion with afection, made God both lover and beloved, and
completed the divine with femininity.

There are over forty names by which Krishna is addressed in The Gita, but only
one refers to his pastoral roots: Govinda, which means the cowherd.
We cannot imagine Krishna today without cows, cowherds and milkmaids
(gopikas). But the lore of his childhood amongst pastoral communities was
elaborated and put down in writing only after the composition of the
Mahabharata and The Gita, in the fourth-century Harivamsa, the fifth-century
Vishnu Purana, the tenth-century Bhagavata Purana (also known as Shreemad
Bhagavatam, or simply Bhagavata) and finally, the twelfth-century Gita Govinda
by the poet Jayadeva, which introduces us to Radha.
Bhagavata in Historical Timeline

In the Harivamsa, great value is placed on Krishna’s parents, Nanda and


Yashoda, who are cowherds, and his secret dalliances with gopikas. We are
introduced to the rasa-mandala, the circular dance formation. But here, Krishna
is not exclusive to any one gopika; he dances with all. In the Gita Govinda,
which was written a few centuries later, Radha appears and demands exclusive
attention. In both, Krishna ultimately leaves the cowherd life and moves to
Mathura, and thereafter gets involved in the events described in the
Mahabharata. Many regional works that followed etched this pastoral Krishna,
son of Yashoda, beloved of Radha, in the Hindu mind. Collectively, we may call
all of this Bhagavata lore. Whatever be the historical timeline, in terms of
narrative, and psychologically, the Bhagavata is located between the Ramayana
and the Mahabharata.

Bhagavata in Narrative Timeline

The Bhagavata is distinct from the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. The
Ramayana and the Mahabharata focus a lot on masculine anxiety over power and
property. The Bhagavata focusses on feminine anxiety about abandonment and
affection. Anxieties stem from our desire to survive. In nature, the quest for
survival gives rise to sex and violence. Hermits, however, seek to give up sex
and violence completely, through practice of celibacy and non-violence, in order
to be rid of all anxiety. Householder traditions seek to minimize anxiety by
regulating sex and violence through rules of marriage and property. The
Ramayana elaborates this. The Mahabharata reveals how rules can be
manipulated with clever logic, and how this can take us away from the path of
dharma. The Bhagavata elaborates on the emotions (bhava) that underlie rules,
sex and violence, and places primacy on emotions over rules. If Buddhism
speaks of shunning desire to break free from suffering, if the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata speak of regulating desire with responsibility, the Bhagavata
qualifies desire with love.
The Bhagavata creates an emotional highway between the devotee
(bhagata/bhakta) and the deity (bhagavan), transforming intellectual and
pragmatic Vedic conversations (Upanishad) into effusive adoration (upasana).
Here, the self (jiva) can be the parent, like Yashoda, to the divine other (param),
who is the child. Here the self can also be a lover, like one of the gopikas who
pines for the divine other, who is the beloved. When Radha comes along she
even transforms the divine into a lover who pines for her, the beloved. The seed
of the Bhagavata traditions can be traced to The Gita itself.

Arjuna, the one who offers me, with affection, a flower, a fruit, some
water, a leaf, I accept.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 9, Verse 26
(paraphrased).

Here, the devotee is expected to be active in devotion and cling to the deity
like a baby monkey clings to its mother. In other verses, the devotee is expected
to be passive in devotion, like a kitten trusting that its mother will take care of it.

Arjuna, give up all that you are doing and have full faith in me. I will
free you from all fetters. Do not worry. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18,
Verse 66 (paraphrased).
Cat Mother and Monkey Mother

In both cases, God is placed on a pedestal: God is the parent and saviour. In
the Ramayana, Sita has no doubt that Ram will find a way to rescue her from the
clutches of the mighty Ravana. In the Mahabharata, when her husbands fail to
protect her, Draupadi turns to Krishna, who prevents her public disrobing at the
hands of the Kauravas. The emotional highway between devotee and deity
moves one way—the devotee is dependent on God; God is not dependent on the
devotee.

Arjuna, I know that those who existed in the past exist in the present and
will exist in the future. None know me.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7,
Verse 26 (paraphrased).

But there is a festering incompleteness in the Ramayana and the


Mahabharata. At the end of the Ramayana, Ram abandons Sita. Despite being
faultless, she finds herself the subject of street gossip and is cast out of the
palace, forced to fend for herself in the forest. At the end of the Mahabharata,
Krishna grants Draupadi her revenge by ensuring that all the Kauravas and their
commanders are killed. But revenge comes at a price: all of Draupadi’s children,
her five sons, are killed too. The jiva-atma feels abandoned. Has the saviour
failed?
Bhagavata traditions take this conversation forward. The one-way emotional
highway becomes two-way, involving not merely transaction but transformation.
The Bhagavata shifts the balance of power.
In the 1,000 years that followed The Gita, the doctrine of Bhakti was
elaborated. It took two distinct routes—the masculine route, based on
submission, celibacy and restraint, embodied in Hanuman; and the feminine
route, based on affection, sensuality and demand, embodied in Yashoda and
Radha. The masculine route was favoured by the mathas, the Hindu monastic
order. The feminine route was favoured by the devadasis, temple dancers who
used the performing arts to connect the masses with the divine.
One can say that the masculine route, grounded in celibacy, was the route of
Vedanta, and the feminine route, grounded in pleasure, was the route of Tantra.
These two thoughts emerged as distinct branches from the seventh century
onwards. This happened because the old division between the Buddhist hermit
and the Hindu householder was collapsing. The Hindu householder started
adopting hermit practices like vegetarianism, while Hindu hermits began
reaching out to the masses through song and dance, practices previously
associated only with the household.
More importantly, knowledge transmission was no longer top-down. It did
not just come from priests who performed rituals and kings who rode chariots
and controlled the land. Ideas were even coming from the bottom upwards, even
from cowherds who wandered the countryside with their cattle in search of
pastures. In the new discourse, God was not a feudal overlord to whom one
submitted. God was a commoner who sought affection and returned affection.
The distant Ram was overshadowed by the more accessible Hanuman. Krishna,
the cowherd, beloved of the gopikas, overshadowed Krishna, guardian of the
Yadavas and guide of the Pandavas.

Masculine Submission and Feminine Affection

The story of Krishna’s childhood mimics a Greek epic until we start


considering the role of the women. It begins with a prophecy that Kansa, the
dictator of Mathura, will be killed by his own nephew, the eighth son of his
sister, Devaki. Kansa imprisons Devaki and kills all the sons she bears. To save
the eighth child, Devaki’s husband, Vasudeva, takes the newborn across the river
Yamuna to the village of cowherds, Gokul, and switches babies, bringing back a
cowherd girl child born the same night. Years later, when Krishna returns to
Mathura and kills Kansa, his true identity is revealed. But many still refer to him
as the son of a cowherd, rather contemptuously, an indicator of social hierarchy.
But family name and honour, so important to Ram, do not matter to Krishna. He
has discovered something deeper—love—that conquers all anxieties.
Krishna owes this discovery to the milkmaids of Gokul and Vrinda-vana.
They collectively raised Krishna as their own child, showered him with
affection, indulged his pranks, suffered his mischief, admonished him when he
crossed the line and loved him as a mother would, even though none of them had
given birth to him. This is parental love (vatsalya bhava), embodied in Yashoda.

Krishna and Yashoda

When Krishna becomes a youth, his relationship with the gopikas changes.
Pranks give way to flirtation. The child is forgotten as the man takes over. The
women now quietly slip out of their homes at night when their family is asleep
and go deep into the forest (vana), unafraid to dance in a circle around Krishna,
who plays the enchanting flute. There are passionate disagreements, demands,
separations and reunions. He is not their brother, father, son or husband. Theirs
is not a relationship governed by niti (law) or riti (tradition). Yet, in his
company, they feel alive and secure. It is a relationship that springs from within,
and is not forced from without. Everything is authentic but private, for it is
beyond the comprehension of the public. This is love evoked by presence
(madhurya bhava), union (shringara bhava) and even absence (viraha bhava),
embodied in Radha.
When Krishna leaves the village of Vrinda-vana for the city of Mathura, he
promises he will be back. But he cannot keep that promise. He sends his friend,
Uddhava, to inform his village of his decision to stay in the city, and to comfort
them in heartbreak. Uddhava’s advice is intellectual in approach and monastic in
spirit: he speaks of the impermanent nature of things and the importance of
letting go. Radha replies with a smile— she is not afraid of pain and suffering
and abandonment. In fact, she relishes it, for it reminds her of Krishna. ‘He is the
black bee who moves from flower to flower, but I am the flower that cannot
leave its tree. He has transformed me, enabled me to turn into a fruit that
contains the seed of love.’

Krishna and Radha

The abandoned women of Gokul and Vrinda-vana, be it the mother,


Yashoda, or the lover, Radha, express what the abandoned women of the
Ramayana and the Mahabharata do not: love, not anger. They do not judge
Krishna. They don’t expect him to ask for forgiveness, because there is nothing
to forgive. They do not begrudge him his ambitions, his compulsions and his
adventures. They don’t want him to turn back. They accept the nature of nature:
nothing lasts forever, everything changes. They want their beloved to move on
his outer journey, just as their love for him inspires them to undertake their inner
journey. They are no longer dependent on him. But they will always be
dependable for him.
This attitude of the womenfolk has a huge impact on Krishna. Being God is
not about being limitless, it is about allowing the limited and including the
limited, despite all their shortcomings, as a wise parent allows a child to grow up
and go on his or her own path. Krishna acknowledges his indebtedness to the
gopikas of Gokul when despite being male, he always strikes a very female pose,
the tri-bhagna. This makes him the purna-avatar, the complete incarnation of
Vishnu to walk the earth.
In the Bhagavata Purana, we find the story of how Yashoda once found baby
Krishna eating dirt. She scolded him and forced him to open his mouth so that
she could wash the dirt away. But within his mouth she beheld a vision of the
whole universe, similar to the one Arjuna sees in Chapter 11 of The Gita. It
terrified her. For a moment she realized the awesomeness of her child. But then
she resumed her maternal duties, bathing him, feeding him, educating him,
admonishing him when the neighbours complained about his pranks, even
punishing him when he disobeyed. He might be God, but she was his mother.
For her sake, the deity became a child. For his sake, the devotee stayed a mother.
Yoga may expand our mind, but love demands that we contract ourselves so
that our lover does not feel inadequate or inferior. This conscious contraction of
divinity is why the infinite bhagavan descends on earth as the finite avatar,
experiencing death as Ram and Krishna for the benefit of his devotees. In
Chapter 11, Arjuna wants to see Krishna in his cosmic form. A curious child, the
thought excites him.

Krishna, I have heard in detail the grand nature of the world, how things
fold and unfold. I am curious to see your divine form that you describe.
Show me, if you feel I can handle it.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11,
verses 2 to 4 (paraphrased).

But when Krishna does display his form, its awesomeness ends up
intimidating Arjuna, for it suddenly makes him aware of his insignificance in the
cosmic canvas.

Krishna, I am happy to see your secret form, but it frightens me. Return
to your original form, please. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11, Verse 45
(paraphrased).

The thousand-armed God becomes the two-armed friend and charioteer once
again. If devotion to Ram makes Hanuman expand and become bhagavan, then
affection for Arjuna makes Krishna contract to become an avatar. He is like the
mother who pretends not to see the child while playing a game of hide-and-seek.
Though limitless himself, he submits to the limited truth of those around him.
These are the games (leela) the deity-parent plays with the devotee-child. The
aim of bhagavan’s contraction (avatarana) is to uplift the devotee (uddhar). For
bhagavan can see all slices of reality and can make the bhakta see more than just
the one.

Expanding and Contracting

Ram uplifts Hanuman, but Krishna realizes that Arjuna does not have the
same capacity and capability as Hanuman. However, he does not make Arjuna
feel small. Like Yashoda and Radha, he never judges the Pandavas, never makes
them feel guilty for gambling away their kingdom. He simply prepares them to
face the consequences of their action.
Darshan of the other enables us to acknowledge and accept their
inadequacies. This makes them neither small nor helpless. It just makes them
different. A student may not learn because he does not have the capacity, or
because he does not have the will or because he does not have the resources.
None of these makes the wise teacher unhappy, for he knows that teaching is
about the student’s benefit, not for his aggrandizement. He cannot control the
karma of the student; he can only focus on the svaha of his yagna, plant the
karma-bija and not seek control over the karma-phala.
Likewise, a wise man never argues when a less learned man argues with
him. He knows when to expand and when to contract, when to give and when to
receive. Darshan of the limited other enables the self to gain insight into the
human condition and further expand the mind. By submitting to the truth, the
yajamana experiences brahmana.
A hermit does not want to do yagna. A saviour is only a benefactor
(yajamana). But a lover is both benefactor (yajamana) and beneficiary (devata).
In The Gita, Krishna identifies himself with the input to the yagna.

Arjuna, I am food for the child, exchange for the adult, offering to the
dead, medicine to the sick, the chant, the butter, the fire, the libation.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 9, Verse 16 (paraphrased).

Then, in another verse, Krishna becomes the recipient of the output.

Arjuna, offerings made with affection to other deities eventually reach


me. I am the recipient of all libations. Most do not recognize me, and so
falter.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 9, verses 23 and 24 (paraphrased).

Ram may be the saviour of the downtrodden (patita-pavana), stoically


bearing the burden of royal responsibilities and suffering personal tragedy, but
Krishna is also a lover. He gives and receives. He is not complete without
Radha. In Radha-bhakti, the jiva-atma may seek param-atma in the forest and
dance around him, but Krishna also yearns for her, filling the forest with his
lovelorn chant, ‘Radhe! Radhe!’ And while Sita and Ram are separated by social
laws and remain heartbroken in separation, Krishna and Radha move on with
their respective lives—Krishna always carries Radha in his heart, and Radha
always carries Krishna in hers. For Krishna, his time in Gokul may be limited,
but his love for Radha is limitless.

Hermit, Saviour and Lover

Radha, however, is excluded from many Krishna-bhakti traditions, such as


those of Shankardev in Assam and the Mahanubhav panth of Chakradhara
Swami in Maharashtra. There is no Radha image in most major temples of
Krishna outside the Gangetic plans, such as those in Puri, Pandharpur, Udupi,
Guruvayur or Nathdwara. Radha’s unabashed eroticism and the rather Tantric
approach of mutuality was not universally accepted, especially suggestions that
Radha was older and was Krishna’s aunt (either Nanda’s younger sister or
married to Yashoda’s brother), metaphors that sought to intensify the social
inappropriateness, so as to amplify the genuineness of the emotional connection.
Preference was given to the nameless milkmaids of the Bhagavata Purana whose
love (prema) is seen as pure, uncontaminated by eroticism (kama). Or the entire
Bhagavata lore came to be dominated by Yashoda, whose maternal love is not as
discomforting as Radha’s love.
For centuries, the devadasis of Hindu temples sang the song of the cowherd
(‘Gita Govinda’) that describes the intense emotions of Krishna and Radha
revealed secretly, at night, outside the village, in the forest. The voice of the
devadasis was silenced in the early twentieth century as they were deemed
prostitutes. Greater value was placed on the Hindu monastic order that preferred
the celibate Hanuman and the song of God (Bhagavad Gita).

Shifts in Bhakti Literature

The Gita speaks of bhakti as devotion, with God occupying a higher position
and the devotee submitting to him. However, in Chapter 18, Verse 65, he does
refer to Arjuna as 'one very dear to me' (priyo-si-me), indicating love. Gita
Govinda wipes out the hierarchy and transforms bhakti into affection. In it,
Krishna begs Radha to place her feet on his head to cure him of the poison of
longing, lines that, legend has it, Jayadeva himself hesitated to write, but Krishna
wrote for him, thus indicating the power of love.

Sometimes, you can see more than me, but you pretend to know less so
that I don’t feel intimidated by you. I do the same for you. We do not
feel superior when the other is vulnerable; or inferior when we feel
helpless. This is what sustains our relationship.
13.
You and I have no control

As the mind expands, you and I will accept how helpless we really are, how
limited our control over the world is. We will discover how every organism has
little control over his or her own capabilities and capacities that are dependent on
their natural material tendencies, or guna, which in turn is shaped by karma. It
will dawn on us that we are not agents who can change the world, we are merely
instruments of the world, that is constantly changing. In this chapter we shall
explore the three guna. From here onwards, the conversation becomes less
emotional and more intellectual: we venture from bhakti yoga to gyana yoga as
we understand the role of insecurity and identity in shaping our choice of action.
Krishna elaborates on the guna in chapters 14, 17 and 18 of The Gita.

In Chapter 3, Arjuna speaks of the inability to control the mind.

Krishna, how is it that despite unwillingness, humans do bad things?—


Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3, Verse 36 (paraphrased).

He was perhaps thinking of his eldest brother, the upright Yudhishthira, who
could not stop himself from gambling away their kingdom, his brothers, their
wife and even himself. Or perhaps he was thinking of his elder brother, the
mighty Bhima, who could not stop himself from killing Kichaka, the lout who
tried to abuse Draupadi while they were hiding disguised as servants in the
palace of Virata, despite Yudhishthira’s express instructions to resist every urge
to reveal their secret identities, for if any Pandava was recognized before the end
of the stipulated period, they would have to go back into exile for another
thirteen years. Or perhaps he was wondering why his grand-uncle Bhisma and
tutor Drona were fighting on the Kauravas’ side. Krishna attributes this inability
to guna, the tendency of matter.

Arjuna, in your conceit you may declare that you do not want to fight
but your nature will compel you to do so, shattering all resolve.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, verses 59 and 60 (paraphrased).

Krishna mentions guna early in his discourse in Chapter 2 of The Gita, but
elaborates on it only later in chapters 14, 17 and 18. In between, he takes Arjuna
on a detour: the inner journey of discovering the divine nature of dehi. This
exploration of bhagavan and bhakti in the middle third portion of The Gita
marks an acknowledgement of the role emotion plays in cognition. Unless the
heart feels secure, the head will not accept the reality revealed by darshan: the
reality that humans are helpless before the force of nature, that karma determines
the circumstances of our life and guna determines the personality of people
around us. We can, at best, understand these, but we cannot control them.
Attempts at control only contribute to inescapable and often dreadful
consequences that haunt us lifetime after lifetime, generation after generation.

Arjuna, mind and matter have always existed and from tendencies of
matter all forms that exist have come into being.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 13, Verse 19 (paraphrased).

Darshan reveals that humans are propelled by desire, animals by fear, plants
by hunger, but what eventually manifests depends on the guna that constitutes
each individual. Even elements and minerals that have no internal or external
drive, no hunger or fear, are continuously transforming because of guna. Guna is
what causes clouds to expand, temperatures to shift, rivers to cascade, volcanoes
to explode, the sun to rise and set, tides to ebb and flow and winds to blow even
when there is no life around. Guna is the nature of nature, the root of its diversity
and dynamism. The atma within observes the dance of guna.
Arjuna, the truly wise can see that restless nature is the agent, not the
immortal one within, but all diverse forms depend on, and emanate
from, that one.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, verses 29 and 30
(paraphrased).

Guna Underlies All Actions

The guna are three (tri-guna): tamas, rajas and sattva. The tendency towards
inertia comes from tamas guna, the tendency towards activity from rajas guna
and the tendency towards balance from sattva guna. The three guna cannot exist
without the other. They are like three phases of a wave: tamas being the
movement downwards towards the nadir, rajas being the movement upwards
towards the crest and sattva being the balance, the point at which there is a
pause.

Tri-guna as Parts of a Wave

In the elements, tamas guna dominates, which is why they have a tendency
towards inertia, unless acted upon by an external force (first law of
thermodynamics). In plants and animals, rajas guna dominates, which is why
they grow and run to overcome hunger and fear in order to survive. In humans,
the sattva guna dominates, which is why only humans are able to trust and care
for strangers, empathize and exchange. But it does not mean that all humans are
sattvik. While humans have a strong sattvik component compared to animals,
plants and minerals, amongst humans there is a differential distribution of all
three guna.

Arjuna, when sattva shines through all body gates, there is happiness and
understanding; when rajas shines through, there is greed, restlessness
and lust; when tamas shines through, there is confusion and indolence.
At the time of death, if sattva dominates, rebirth takes place in happy
and knowledgeable realms; if rajas dominates, rebirth takes place in
action-filled realms; if tamas dominates, rebirth takes place in lost,
decaying realms. From sattva comes knowledge, from rajas desire and
from tamas ignorance.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 14, verses 11 to 17
(paraphrased).

Guna impact not just matter but also the mind. Thus, thought and emotions
also display the three tendencies. Therefore some people are lazy followers,
some are driven leaders who want to change the world and some decide when to
follow and when to lead, and know that the world can be changed only
cosmetically with technology, but not in essence, at a psychological level. Tamas
guna stops us from thinking, so we follow the trend. Rajas guna stops us from
trusting anyone but ourselves. Sattva guna makes us care for those who are
frightened, intimidated by the diverse and dynamic reality of the world.
Different guna dominate at different times. Tamas guna is dominant in a
child who follows the adult parent. Rajas guna is dominant in a doubting,
fiercely independent, energetic youth who strives to make his own path. Sattva
guna is dominant in the mature, who understand when to be silent and when to
speak, when to follow and when to lead.
The guna can be seen literally or metaphorically. They explain the diversity
of nature, the diversity of ecosystems, plants, animals and humans, the diversity
displayed by each living creature in various stages of his or her life. When we
react unconsciously or involuntarily, unaware or unable to control our impulses,
we are being governed by our guna. Guna results in karma and karma creates
guna. This creates the fluid material world: the complex canvas of our existence.

Arjuna, there is none born on earth or in heaven who is free of the


influence of the three tendencies. —Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, Verse
40 (paraphrased).
Chapter 17 informs us how the three guna can express themselves as
external activities: faith (shraddha), food (ahara), exchange (yagna), austerity
(tapasya) and charity (daan). In tamas, the tendency is to be lazy and confused,
and so there is mimicry of the other. In rajas, the tendency is to achieve,
dominate and impress, and so there is initiative and aggression towards the other.
In sattva, the tendency is to understand and be happy, and so there is gentleness
and affection for the other.

Arjuna, everyone’s faith is in line with their nature. They are what they
believe. The satvik worship those who give on getting; the rajasik
worship hoarders and grabbers; the tamasik worship ghosts. Worship
need not be based on scriptures, and can involve harrowing penance and
torture for self-aggrandizement, hypocrisy and passion. Different is the
food we like. Different is also the reason for exchanging, being austere
or charitable.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 17, verses 4 to 7 (paraphrased).

Chapter 18 takes things further and classifies even internal aspects of our
being, from knowledge to activity to personality to intelligence to willpower to
happiness, to the three guna. Each time, tamas involves backward movement and
no thought, rajas involves forward movement with self-absorbed thought and
sattva involves appropriate movement, forward or backward, taking even the
other into consideration.

Arjuna, the tamasik gives up action fooled by others; the rajasik gives up
action in fear; the sattvik never gives up action, only the fruits of action,
doing not just the nice, shunning not the nasty.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 18, verses 7 to 10 (paraphrased).

Tri-guna Within and Without


In Chapter 18, Krishna attributes human aptitude and talent (varna) to the
guna.

Arjuna, it is these tendencies that create the four aptitudes: scholarship,


leadership, entrepreneurship and servitude.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter
18, verses 41 to 44 (paraphrased).

Our talents come from our guna. This does not mean that every talent can be
mapped to a particular guna. It does not mean that scholarship comes from sattva
guna, or leadership and entrepreneurship come from rajas guna or servitude
comes from sattva guna. It means that the three guna, in different proportions,
manifest as scholarship, leadership, entrepreneurship and servitude. We will find
scholars who are rajasik, sattvik or tamasik; leaders who are rajasik, sattvik or
tamasik; entrepreneurs who are rajasik, sattvik or tamasik; servants who are
rajasik, sattvik or tamasik.

Mapping Varna to Guna

From around 2,000 years ago, we find in Indian society a discomfort with
fluidity and a great desire to fix things with rules. Genetic studies have shown us
that India’s infamous caste system, which began as professional guilds, became
increasingly rigid from this time onwards. This was the time when the Manu
Smriti and other such books, that reduced dharma to a set of rules (niti) and
traditions (riti), came to be written. Rules were aimed to create predictability and
so greater value was placed on gender and lineage, than talent. Communities
(jati) started following a particular profession that maintained their fidelity by
insisting that the sons follow the father’s trade and daughters not marry outside
the community. The Manu Smriti mapped these jatis to the varnas: thus it was
assumed that children of priests would be scholars, children of kings would be
leaders, children of traders would be entrepreneurs and children of servants
would be servile. Further, these varnas were mapped to guna: Brahmin jati was
mapped to sattva guna, Kshatriya jati and Vaishya jati to rajas guna and Shudra
jati to tamas guna.
The Manu Smriti, and other such law books, are more political and
prejudiced than accurate, for every community has members of all three guna.
And in every community there will be those who think, those who get things
done, those who calculate and those who follow. The Manu Smriti reveals the
human attempt to control the world and make nature predictable by forcing
people to follow the vocation of their fathers. It is all about trying to fix a fluid
world, a futile effort according to The Gita.
The Mahabharata, for example, speaks of Karna, whose talent as archer
overrides the social demand that he follow his father’s vocation and stay a
charioteer. No matter how hard we try to fix things, nature will break all
boundaries and rules. Varna will always overshadow jati. Duryodhana
appreciates Karna’s talent while Draupadi, the Pandavas, Bhisma and Drona
reject and mock Karna. Duryodhana sees in him an opportunity and the rest see
him as a threat. Nobody is a yogi. They are either attracted (raga) or repelled
(dvesha) by him. No one sees Karna for himself, beyond his varna and jati, that
he cannot stop himself from pursuing his passion for archery, logical arguments
notwithstanding, for such is the power of one’s guna.

Mapping Jati to Guna

Likewise, marriage rules are designed to regulate the desires of humanity.


But guna will force us to challenge these rules. Thus in Ramayana, though
married, Parashurama’s mother Renuka desires Kartaviryarjuna, Gautama’s wife
Ahalya desires Indra and Ravana’s sister Surpanakha desires Ram. Renuka is
beheaded, Ahalya turned to stone and Surpanakha’s nose is cut off. None of
these brutal actions stops nature from changing its course. Guna will
continuously make people take decisions that even their mind opposes.
A judge tends to see sattva guna as superior and tamas guna as inferior, but
the observer knows that sattva guna is the most desirable simply because it is
least threatening while tamas guna is least desirable because it is burdensome.
Rajas guna is glamorous and seductive, for it is associated with ambition and
determination and is seen as far more proactive, compared to the reactive sattva
guna.
The observer also distinguishes the sattvika from the yogi—the sattvika’s
tranquillity is effortless and inborn, while the yogi’s tranquillity is the outcome
of learning and effort. The yogi pays attention to the other, which distinguishes
him from the sattvika.

‘Arjuna, the wise observer does not hate what is there and seek what is
not there amidst light or activity or delusion. He knows that it is the
tendencies of matter at work, and so is always indifferent to the shifts
around, always at peace, amidst pleasure and pain, gold or clay, when
loved or unloved, when treated as friend or foe, in honour or disgrace, if
praised or blamed.’—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 14, verses 22 to 25
(paraphrased).

Views on Tri-guna

Krishna points to rajas guna for all desires (kama) and anger (krodha); tamas
guna for all laziness and confusion; sattva guna for a balanced, responsible view.
The moment we say that the agent is the guna, we don’t take credit or blame, nor
do we give credit or blame. In other words, we don’t judge. We are able to
connect with atma. The moment we judge, attribute agency to others or
ourselves, for fortune or misfortune, we disconnect from atma and give rise to
aham. In aham, we don’t accept the power of guna and blame people for our
problems. We then seek leaders if we are tamasika, followers if we are rajasika
or simply disconnect if we are sattvika.

Arjuna, the lord resides in everyone’s hearts, deluding them with a sense
of control while making them go round and round like cogs in a wheel.
—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, Verse 61 (paraphrased).

A yogi accepts that the stubbornness of Ravana in the Ramayana, Kansa in


the Bhagavata Purana and Duryodhana in the Mahabharata are the results of
their guna, which is beyond their control. As bhakta, he attributes their
behaviour to the games (leela) of God. This makes it easier to make even the
undesirable part of a yagna, rather than simply exclude them.

Response of Different People to Villains

We are all a masala box of guna, with one guna dominating at different
times. We can all be lazy, assertive, detached or engaged. Yoga makes
us aware of the guna at work.
14.
You and I value property

Guna may determine our body and our personality. Karma may determine the
circumstances of our life. But humans have the power to create their own
identity by creating and claiming property, or kshetra. Society values people
more as proprietors, than as residents of the body, for property is visible and
measurable. As a result, ‘mine’ becomes more important than ‘me’. The gaze
shifts from the inside to the outside. Krishna speaks of kshetra before he speaks
of the tri-guna, in Chapter 13 of The Gita, but in My Gita kshetra is discussed
after guna, as it flows better into the following chapters by introducing us to the
social body, the artificial expansion of the body, found only in human society.

To stay alive, animals need to know the identity of the other: whether the
animal around them is a predator (can it eat me?) or prey (can I eat it?); mate
(can we produce offspring?) or rival (can it grab my food or mate?). They need
to locate the other, and thus themselves, precisely in the food chain and pecking
order.
Humans do not have to bother about food chains and pecking order. But we
wonder who we are, and about our relationship with those around us. What is
our purpose? How are we valued?
Purpose

A thing in nature has value only if it can be consumed as food. The sun, the
rain and the earth did not have any value until trees came along and sought
sunlight, water and soil as food. Likewise, plants had no value until animals
sought them as food. Animals had no value until other animals sought them as
food. Who seeks humans as food? Can humans be of value without being
consumed?

Value Chain = Food Chain

Speculation along these lines led to the composition of the Rig Vedic hymn
of humanity (purusha sukta), which speaks of the consumption of man, and the
Yajur Vedic ritual of dismemberment of the human-animal (purusha-medha).
Both hymn and ritual were composed a thousand years before the composition of
The Gita. Both can be taken literally or metaphorically. The literal approach
associates them with human sacrifice: this idea appealed to the nineteenth-
century European Orientalist notion of exotic India, of the ‘noble savage’. The
metaphorical approach draws attention to the human ability to give meaning to
each other, and nourish each other emotionally and intellectually. In the
Upanishads, it is common to equate food (anna) with meaning and identity
(atma): food is what all living creatures seek; meaning is what only humans
seek. The same idea is visualized in Chapter 11 of The Gita, when Arjuna
notices Krishna’s universal form consuming humans.

Krishna, I can see the warriors of their side and ours rushing into your
mouth, being crushed between your teeth, entering your blazing mouth
like rivers running into the ocean. Entire worlds hurry to your mouth to
be destroyed, like moths to flame. You devour all the worlds with your
many fiery mouths.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 11, verses 26 to 30
(paraphrased).

This vision taken literally can be terrifying, as Krishna appears as a predator,


even a villain. But when the blindfold of judgement is removed, Arjuna
understands the metaphor: by consuming the Pandavas and Kauravas, Krishna is
giving them value. He is declaring that they nourish him, thus extending the
logic. Arjuna realizes that he exists as ‘food’ for those around him. He brings
value to his brothers, to his cousins, to the world at large. They are also ‘food’
for him. They nourish him, give him value and purpose. This consumption is
both material and psychological. Withdrawal from the battle would mean
denying the others meaning.

Man as Food

But while Krishna eats, he is not really hungry. He declares that he is


immortal, and so does not fear death, and does not need food. He declares he is
infinite, and so he cannot be separated from the other—he is both the eater and
the eaten. He eats, not because he is hungry, but to make the other feel valued.
And he allows himself to be eaten to nourish the other. In other words, he is a
yogi who does not seek meaning from outside; he gets his identity from within,
from the atma.

‘Arjuna, I am the ritual, I am the exchange, the offering, the herb, the
chant, the butter, the fire, all that is offered.’—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter
4, Verse 24 (paraphrased).

Meaning From Within and Outside

Before the start of the Kuru-kshetra war, the Pandavas and the Kauravas
once came to Krishna for help. Krishna offered them all that he had: one could
have Narayani, his fully equipped army, and the other could have Narayana, his
own unarmed self. The Kauravas chose Narayani while Pandavas chose Krishna.
Narayani is Krishna’s resources, all that he has. Narayana is all that he is. The
former is tangible and measurable, and even outlasts death, hence preferred by
the Kauravas over the latter.
The Kauravas mimic the behaviour of the asuras in the Puranas who prefer
Brahma’s boons to Brahma. The Kauravas and the asuras seek material
nourishment, not emotional or intellectual nourishment. They seek ‘his’ not
‘him’.
During a yagna, Narayani is exchanged: 'mine' becomes 'yours'. If this is
done with consideration of the hungers and fears of the devata, then the
yajamana has a relationship with the devata. If, the yajamana, is only focussed
on his hungers and fears, then it is simply a transaction with the devata where
more value is given to 'what you have' rather than 'who you are'.
Relationships and Transactions

Economists value the Narayani called wealth. Educationists value the


Narayani called literacy. Politicians value the Narayani called power. Feminists
value the Narayani called gender. Employers value the Narayani called skill.
Physicians and surgeons value the Narayani called the body. Society is not
interested in Narayana—what a person is: his hungers, his fears, or his potential.
Things matter more than thoughts. Property becomes a substitute for feelings.
Hence the purpose of life has become all about acquiring more and more
Narayani. In The Gita, the concept of Narayani is presented in Chapter 13 as
kshetra.

Kshetra literally means a farm, a manmade space created by domesticating


nature. In nature, there are no farms. Humans turn forest into farms to produce
food. They mark out the boundaries, uproot the trees, clear the land, till the soil,
sow the seeds, permit growth of crops and get rid of weeds. The farmer protects
the farm and the produce fiercely. Born of his effort, he claims ownership of the
farm: ‘It is mine’. Other humans acknowledge it: ‘It is yours.’ Thus, the farm
becomes his property. The property nourishes him, physically and
psychologically. Physically it gives him food. Psychologically it gives him an
identity of a farmer. He feels entitled. The property also grants him immortality,
since he can bequeath it to his family, who are also his own.

Field versus Farm

In nature, there is no property. There is territory that animals fight over to


ensure they have enough food supply. Territories cannot be inherited; they go to
the strongest. Properties, however, can be inherited. The son gets the estate, the
title and all the accompanying wealth, power and status from the father.
In the Ramayana, during the forest exile, when Lakshmana draws a line
(rekha) around Sita’s hut, he very publicly defines what is Ram’s kshetra. Within
the Lakshmana-rekha, Sita is Ram’s wife; outside she is just a woman for the
taking. Kshetra thus is an artificial construction, not a natural phenomenon.

Me and Mine

In Chapter 2, Krishna speaks of deha and dehi, the body and resident of the
body. In Chapter 13, he speaks of kshetra and kshetragna, the property and
proprietor. Another word used for kshetragna is kshetri. The resident transforms
into the proprietor as the body expands to include titles and estate.

Arjuna, the wise know the body as a farm and the mind as its farmer.
This body, your farm, is constituted by the five elements that make up
your flesh, your notion of who you are, your intelligence, your emotions,
your sense organs, your response organs and the pastures that your
senses graze upon, and all that causes pain and pleasure, attraction and
revulsion.—Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 13, verses 1 to 6 (paraphrased).

In the Upanishads, kshetra is seen as the third layer of deha. It is the


outermost layer, known as the social layer (karana-sharira). Then comes the
physical layer (sthula-sharira) and finally the mental layer (sukshma-sharira).
Social body refers to property inherited at birth or earned through effort.
Physical body, container of beauty, skills and talent, is the flesh, which is
acquired at birth. The mental body comprises our sensations, our feelings and
our ideas and, most importantly, how we imagine ourselves. The mental body is
the resident-owner, dehi-kshetragna. When the mind outgrows its dependence on
kshetra and deha, it discovers atma. When we die, the deha is cremated. We live
behind kshetra. The dehi/kshetragna/atma move on to the next life if still
dependent on deha and kshetra, else it breaks free entirely from the unending
waves of rebirths and re-deaths.

Three Bodies

In the Mahabharata, both Arjuna and Karna are talented archers. In fact,
Karna has the distinct advantage of being born with celestial armour and earrings
that cling to his body like flesh. But society respects Arjuna more than Karna,
because Arjuna is seen as a prince of the Kuru clan and legal heir of Hastinapur,
while Karna is seen as a charioteer’s son, even after he is made a warrior and
king by Duryodhana who admires his talent with the bow. For society, kshetra is
more important than deha. No one cares about dehi.
So much value is given to the external that neither Arjuna nor Karna look
within for identity. Arjuna derives his identity from his talent (archery), his
inherited title (Pandu’s son) and the estate he cultivates (Indra-prastha). Karna
also derives his identity from his talent (archery), but he distances himself from
his inherited title (charioteer’s son) and strives to earn new titles (Duryodhana’s
friend) and estates (Anga). Identity based on what we have is aham, not atma.
The karana-sharira is an outcome of karma—past karma and present karma.
What we attract naturally towards us is based on past karma. What we bring
forcibly towards us is based on current karma. Arjuna’s royal status is based on
past karma, as is Karna’s association with charioteers. Neither of them chose
this. It was an accident of birth. Archery is their inborn talent that they inherited
and honed with effort. Arjuna’s association with Indra-prastha, and Karna’s
association with Anga, are the outcome of effort. Or are they? Were these
properties supposed to come into their lives after a struggle? It is not easy to
answer these questions. Karana-sharira remains mysterious. It travels with us
from our previous lives into our next lives, gathering impressions of karma,
keeping a record of debts that we are obliged to repay.

Two Types of Social Bodies

Property and proprietors exist only in culture (sanskriti), not nature


(prakriti). The divide between nature and culture, forest and field, is a consistent
theme in Hinduism. In the Sama Veda, where hymns of the Rig Veda are put to
melody, songs are classified into two: songs of the forest (aranya-gana) and
songs of the settlement (grama-gana). What applies to the forest does not apply
to the settlement: in the forest, the rules of man are meaningless, not so in the
settlement. The Pandavas realize this during their exile.
In the forest, Arjuna shoots a wild boar and discovers it has been struck by
another arrow, that of a tribal, or kirata. As entitled prince, he claims the boar as
his. But the kirata does not recognize him as prince, and demands that the two
fight over it like two alpha males fighting over a territory or a mate: the winner
takes the prize. In the forest, Arjuna realizes his social body does not matter.
Only his strength and skill do.
In the final year of exile, the Pandavas have to hide, keep their identities
secret. As per the agreement with the Kauravas, if discovered in this year, they
would have to go back to the forest for another twelve years. During this period,
they take employment as servants in the palace of Virata, king of Matsya. They
discover for the first time what it means to be a servant, when one has nothing to
offer other than skills and so become the objects of constant abuse and
exploitation.

The Pandavas as Princes and as Servants

Without their titles or estates, the Pandavas had no value. To get back their
kshetra from the Kauravas naturally became the purpose of their life. Krishna’s
conversation with Arjuna, however, is not to enable this. It is to teach Arjuna
that while society may value him for his kshetra, while securing that kshetra for
his family should be his purpose as property is vital for his family’s survival, he
must not derive his identity from property. Identity comes from within, not
without: from kshetri, not kshetra, from dehi, not deha.

Source of human meaning

You may value me for what I have and what I do. But I am not what I
have or what I do. If you love me, focus on who I am: my hungers and
my fears, and my potential to focus on who you are.
15.
You and I compare

Animals and plants do not measure or compare. They fight for as much territory
as they need to survive. But humans can measure the size of their property and
hence compare. This ability to measure and delimit reality is called maya. Maya
establishes the structures, divisions and hierarchies of society, in which we
locate our identity and the identities of those whom we compare ourselves with.
We can qualify these yardsticks as unwanted illusions, or necessary delusions,
that imagination can easily overturn. While the word maya is used a lot in the
Vedas and The Gita in the sense of the magical powers of the human mind, its
role in measurement and construction of human perception was elaborated much
later in the Vedantic tradition that flowered about a thousand years ago.

Kshetra demands clear demarcation of what is mine and what is yours. In the
Mahabharata, the Kauravas do not consider the Pandavas to be theirs, which is
why Dhritarashtra refers to his sons as ‘mine’, and refers to his nephews not as
his brother’s sons but merely as ‘Pandu’s sons’. He considers both Hastinapur
and Indra-prastha as Kuru-kshetra, belonging to the Kauravas, and sees the
Pandavas as intruders.
The Pandava brothers consist of two sets of brothers borne by Pandu’s two
wives—three sons from Kunti and the twins from Madri. During the gambling
match, Yudhishthira first gambles away Nakula, the son of Madri, indicating that
he considers his stepbrother a little less his than Arjuna and Bhima. Later in the
forest, when his four brothers die after drinking the water of the poisoned lake,
and he is given the option of bringing only one of his brothers back, he chooses
Nakula over Kunti’s sons, indicating a shift in mindset: he realizes that a good
king is one who expands his boundaries and turns even half-brothers, cousins
and strangers into relatives.
In the Bhagavata, Krishna never talks to Balarama as his half-brother. There
is no division between them. He does not treat his biological parents, Devaki and
Vasudeva, as different from his foster parents, Yashoda and Nanda. In the
Mahabharata, however, Karna never identifies himself with his foster parents, as
they are charioteers and he aspires to be an archer.
This ability to create a boundary, and shift boundaries, between what I
consider mine and what I do not consider mine comes from maya, the unique
human ability to measure, delimit and apportion. The word maya is commonly
translated as illusion, or delusion, but its root ‘ma’ means to ‘to measure’. Maya
is the delusion when we look at the world through the filter of measurement.
Measurement helps us to label and categorize all things around us in order to
make sense of the world. We organize the world into understandable units, such
as the periodic table of all elements in chemistry, or the various taxonomies of
plants and animals and diseases in biology. Measurement is key to science, to
understanding nature. However, with measurement also comes judgement—we
not only classify, we also compare, create hierarchies, hence compete. This gives
rise to conflict.

Mine and Not Mine

The kshetragna cannot be compared to anything, as it is infinite and


immortal. The atma within you is the same as the atma within me. But if you and
I are not in touch with our atma, and we do not empathize with each other’s
hungers and fears and potential, we will compare our respective kshetras to
locate ourselves in a hierarchy and give ourselves an identity.
When value comes from what I have, then the more I have, the more
valuable I become. And so I want to ensure that I have more than you. That is
why in the Ramayana, conflict begins with comparison. Kaikeyi hates being
junior queen. So she wants her husband, Dasharatha, king of Ayodhya, to crown
her son as heir, so that as queen mother she can dominate over the senior queen,
Kaushalya.
The Mahabharata also speaks of conflict generated by comparison. Pandu,
king of Hastinapur, retires to the forest following a curse that prevents him from
mating with his wives and fathering children. His two wives, Kunti and Madri,
follow him to the forest and Kunti tells him of a way to bypass the curse. ‘I have
a mantra by which I can invoke a deva and compel him to give me a child.’
Pandu does not use this way out until he hears that Gandhari, the blindfolded
wife of his blind elder brother, who is now regent of Hastinapur, is pregnant.
The competitive spirit kicks in. He tells Kunti to take advantage of her mantra.
She calls upon Yama, Vayu and Indra and begets Yudhishtira, Bhima and
Arjuna. Pandu asks for more sons, but Kunti says she cannot use the mantra
more than three times. So Pandu begs her to share it with his second wife, Madri.
Kunti does as advised but is quite irritated when, using one mantra, Madri begets
two children by simply calling the Ashwin Kumars, who always come in a pair.
She refuses to give Madri the mantra again as she wants to be the mother of
more children than Madri. On learning of the birth of Pandu’s children, Gandhari
is so upset that she gets her midwife to strike her pregnant belly with an iron bar
and force the child out. What she delivers instead is a ball of flesh, cold as iron.
She divides and transforms this, with the aid of Rishi Vyasa, to get a hundred
sons, ninety-eight more than Madri, ninety-seven more than Kunti, to establish
her superiority, and hence her husband’s.
Humans very instinctively evaluate and compare. In The Gita, when Krishna
distinguishes between asuras and devas, we position devas as better than asuras.
When Krishna speaks of the three yogas, we wonder which is superior: karma,
bhakti or gyana. When Krishna speaks of the three guna, our minds position
sattva as better than rajas and rajas as better than tamas. When Krishna speaks of
the four varnas, we place Brahmins over Kshatriyas, Kshatriyas over Vaishyas
and Vaishyas over Shudras. This is all because of maya.
Materialism

In nature, there is a pecking order. But animal domination is not aspirational;


it is necessary for survival. Domination ensures they get access to more food.
Humans dominate to grant themselves value, and feel good about themselves.
Social structures are designed to grant humans identity. They are invariably
based on comparsion of the social body, what we have: wealth, knowledge,
contacts and skills. Kaikeyi, Gandhari, Kunti, Pandu, all compete on the basis of
their sons. Who has more children? Whose children are stronger, or smarter?
Whose son is king? I am better than you because what I have is bigger or better
or faster or richer or prettier or cheaper or nicer or nastier than yours. By
comparing our titles and estates we validate ourselves, make ourselves feel
significant and relevant.

Arjuna, the veil of measurements and hierarchies deludes all those who
try to make sense of this material world with its three innate tendencies,
unless they accept the reality of me, who cannot be measured or
compared. Those trapped in this delusion of imagined boundaries
behave like demons.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 7, verses 13 to 15
(paraphrased).

Maya distracts us from infinity and immortality, from the feeling that the
world can continue without us. Maya makes us feel important.
Measurement

In the Puranas, there is a sage called Narada who travels from house to
house comparing people’s talents, titles and estates: his wife is more beautiful,
his son is more talented, his daughter is married to a richer man, he has more
followers, his kingdom is larger, she has more jewellery… This comparison
evokes feelings of inadequacy and jealousy in people. It fuels ambition and
ignites conflicts. Having created the tension, Narada walks away chanting,
‘Narayana! Narayana!’ But no one hears this. They are too consumed by
Narayani (kshetra) to worry about Narayana (kshetragna).
Narada did not want to marry and produce children. He wanted to be a
hermit. This annoyed his father, Brahma, who cursed that Narada would wander
in material reality forever. This is why Narada spends all his time mocking
householders who value themselves on the basis of Narayani, rather than paying
attention to the Narayana within.
Once, Narada came to Dwaraka and tried to spark a quarrel in Krishna’s
house. Krishna’s wives asked him what he wanted. ‘I want you to give me your
husband,’ said the mischievous quarrel-monger. The queens said that they could
not give their husband. ‘Then give me something that you value as equal or more
than him.’ The queens agreed. Krishna was put on a weighing pan and the
queens were asked to put something they valued equal to or more than Krishna
on the other pan. Satyabhama put all her gold. But it made no difference;
Krishna was heavier. Rukmini then placed a single sprig of tulsi on the pan and
declared it to be the symbol of her love for Krishna. Instantly, the weighing scale
titled in her favour and Narada had to be satisfied, not with Satyabhama’s gold
but with Rukmini’s tulsi sprig, symbol of devotion.
This story does not make logical sense: how can a sprig of tulsi weigh more
than Krishna? But it makes metaphorical sense. When the sprig is given meaning
by human imagination, it becomes heavier than anything else. Human
imagination can attribute any value to anything. A dog does not differentiate
between gold and stone. But humans see gold as money and can turn a rock into
a deity. This is the power of imagination. We cannot measure infinity, as
Satyabhama realized when she tried to weigh Krishna against gold. But we can
lock infinity in a symbol, as Rukmini did.

Measuring Krishna

Arjuna, I am infinite and immortal and yet, respecting the ways of


nature, I bind myself in finite and mortal measurable existence.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 4, Verse 6 (paraphrased).

Thus in temples, a rock (pinda, linga) or a fossil (shaligrama) can represent


the formless divine. It is our imagination that gives value to things, purpose to an
activity and identity to a thing. We can give meaning or wipe it away. That is the
power of maya. It is the power of God bestowed upon us humans. Maya is often
called magic, for it has the power to make the world meaningful, transform
every word into a metaphor, every image into a symbol.
Human Ability to Attribute Value

Maya can divide and separate, cause conflict by comparison. It can also turn
anything around, change reality for us, for our mind can give meaning to
anything. For example, a hermit may see sex and violence as horrible, while a
householder may see sex and violence as necessary, even pleasurable. Maya can
divide the world. It can also unite the world, serve as the glue to a relationship,
as we expand our boundaries to include whoever we wish. Duryodhana’s
inclusion of Karna, a charioteer’s son, but exclusion of Arjuna, his royal cousin,
is a case in point. That is why, in colloquial parlance, maya also means
‘affection’, that which binds relationships together.
When people say in Hindi, ‘Sab maya hai,’ it is commonly translated as 'the
world is an illusion or a delusion'. What it means is that the world can be
whatever we imagine it to be—valuable or valueless, fuelling ambition or
cynicism.
In Vedanta there is a popular Sanskrit phrase, ‘Jagad mithya, brahma satya!’
It is translated as ‘the world is a mirage and only divinity is real’. 'Mithya' means
a measured limited truth created through maya. So the phrase can also be
translated as ‘the material world is an incomplete reality, made complete by
imagination and language’. We can manufacture depression and joy in our lives
by the way we measure, delimit and apportion the world. The world itself has no
intrinsic measurement.

Arjuna, the wise look at a learned man, an outcaste, a cow, an elephant


or a dog with an equal eye. A person who sees equality in all, and is
equanimous in all pleasant and unpleasant situations, has realized the
divine for the divine is impartial too.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 5,
verses 18 to 20 (paraphrased).
Do you derive your identity by comparing yourself with me? This is
maya, a necessary delusion without which society cannot function. It can
uplift you with inspiration, depress you with jealousy or grant you peace
by revealing how different you are from me.
16.
You and I cling

If I am what I own, then I cling to what I have to secure my value in the world.
And when you try to take it from me, I feel violated, for my identity is attached
to my property. In this chapter we shall explore moha, an attachment to
boundaries that separates ‘mine’ from ‘not mine’ and transforms violence into
violation. Violation is psychological violence, that may or may not be associated
with physical violence, and the pain is even more searing, for it involves the very
invalidation of our identity. It is directly proportional to our relationship with all
that we consider ‘mine’. The idea of attachment flows through The Gita and
plays a key role in Hindu hermit and householder traditions, meriting a separate
chapter.

All his life the Buddha spoke about the impermanence of things (anikka, in Pali)
and the notion of non-self (anatta, in Pali). Yet, after he died and his body was
cremated, the remains of his body (tooth, hair, nails, bones) were collected by
his disciples and worshipped as relics placed in stupas. Chaityas were built to
enshrine the stupas and around the chaityas came up the viharas where monks
lived. The monks could not let the Buddha slip away into oblivion. They clung
to his physical remains, despite his explicit instructions not to do so, seeking
permanence of the mortal remains of the teacher who expounded on life’s
impermanence. The story goes that when the Buddha was dying, his disciples
wept and wondered how they would live without their master. The Buddha then
realized that he had hoped to be a raft that takes people across the river of
sorrow, but people chose to make him a palanquin that they wanted to carry
around and be burdened with forever. He wanted to liberate them; they wanted
to fetter themselves.
This is one of the ironies of Buddhism. This irony exists even in Hindu
monastic traditions, where monks cling to the bodily remains of their teacher,
and rather than cremate the corpse, they mummify it with salt, bury it and build a
memorial over it, so that the teacher can be venerated forever. This memorial is
called a samadhi, encasing the mortal remains of the hermit who voluntarily
gave up his property (kshetra) initially and his body (deha) eventually.
In nature, there are natural forces of attraction and repulsion, even between
two objects. Plants and animals are drawn to food and shun threats. Over and
above this, humans cling (raga) to property (kshetra) that grants them value in
society. We convince ourselves that our social body defines our identity. To be
told that our true identity is intangible and immeasurable (kshetragna) seems
quite unbelievable, as it can never be proven, only believed. So we cling to goals
or rules, to property or relatives, to titles or ideas, and fight over them as animals
fight over territory. Animals fight because the survival of their body depends on
it. Humans fight as the survival of their identity (aham) depends on it. Clinging
is comforting. Insecurity fuels desire (kama) for more, and so acquiring more
becomes the purpose of life. We get angry (krodha) when we don’t get them,
become greedy (lobha) once we get them, get attached (moha) to them, become
intoxicated with pride (mada) because we possess things, feel jealous of those
who have more and insecure around those who have less (matsarya). Material
reality thus enchants us and crumples our mind several times over. These are
called the six obstacles (arishad-varga) that prevent the mind from expanding,
the aham from transforming into atma and discovering bhagavan.
Kama and Krodha

Arjuna, from aggressive material tendencies is born desire in the senses,


in the heart and the head. Desire is insatiable and if not indulged can
result in rage. Desire and rage can block all wisdom, as smoke masks
fire, dust masks mirrors and the womb masks a baby.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 3, verses 37 to 40 (paraphrased).

We also shun (dvesha) things out of fear. We avoid taking ownership,


responsibility or proprietorship in fear. We are terrified of heartbreak, and so
refuse to fall in love. We are terrified of failing, and so avoid struggles. We are
terrified of the outcome, and so refuse to take any action. We clearly demarcate
what is mine and what is not mine. If attraction of things makes us householders,
and revulsion of things makes us hermits, then neither is actually wise, as neither
accepts reality. As householders, we wish we expand the mine, sometimes at the
cost of yours. As hermits, we want to shun even what is mine and reject all that
is yours.
Reality is allowing things to come to us naturally and not seeking things that
do not come to us naturally. Wisdom is bearing the fruit we are supposed to bear
and not wanting to bear fruit that we cannot bear. Depending on its guna, a tree
bears mango fruit; this is not ambition or desire, it is simply realization of
potential. If we expect a mango tree to bear apples, then problems start. We do
not respect guna. A human being can become a king, a warrior, a merchant, a
servant or a poet, depending on his qualities and potential. If we try to change a
warrior into a poet because we are revolted by war or attracted to poetry, then we
cause tension and suffering. Hinduism therefore does not talk of conversion,
only realization of potential. To let our potential be realized without deriving our
identity from it, or without denying its existence, is the hallmark of wisdom.

Same or Different

Arjuna, all beings follow their nature. Even the wise act according to
their nature. What is the value of restraint then? Your senses will
naturally be drawn to or revolted by things around the body. Do not let
them beguile you and distract you from discovering yourself.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3, Verses 33 and 34 (paraphrased).

To want nothing (shunya) is as delusional as to want everything (ananta).


The wise want nothing but accept whatever comes their way, letting it pass when
it is time to part ways. Ram is not Ram because of what he has on account of his
birth (royal status) or because of what he has achieved (killing Ravana). Even
without these possessions or achievements, he would still be Ram.
Arjuna, he who identifies himself with the atma engages with the
material pleasures without attachment or revulsion, and so is always at
peace.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 64 (paraphrased).

In nature there is violence. In culture there is also violation, for things are
not just things, they are markers of identity. Animals do not feel violated when
their territories are invaded, or their bodies attacked. They fight back for
survival, but there is no morality attached to the violence. Amongst humans,
since we identify ourselves through things, an attack on what we consider ours
becomes a violation of our identity. This is unique to the human species.
Humans can violate another human by attacking their social body (kshetra)
without even touching their physical body (deha). The pain is felt in the mind.
The damage is done to the mental body (aham) that gets its value from the
external body. Thus, when a passerby scratches our car, we feel hurt. The scratch
on the car does not physically hurt us, but we feel emotionally disturbed. We are
violated, even though there is no violence, for our car is our property, a part of
our social body, that contributes to our identity. Human society conditions us to
cling to things around us, gain identity through relationships, titles and estates.
In other words, culture celebrates moha and mada.
Mada refers to the fluid that oozes out of the temples of a sexually aroused
bull elephant. This state is called ‘musth’, when the animal seems fully aroused
and intoxicated and can attack anything that comes in its way. It is determined to
get what it wants. From mada comes the word madira, which means wine. From
mada comes the word Madan, which refers to Kama, god of lust.

Mada: Literal and Metaphorical

But Krishna is also called Madan Mohan. He even turns into the enchantress
Mohini. Vishnu and all his incarnations are associated with a lot of sexual and
violent behaviour. But these are distinguished from attachment and revulsion, for
Vishnu's actions are designed to give value to those around him, not derive value
for himself.
In the Ramayana, Ravana demonstrates this mada when he refuses to give up
Sita, even after Ram kills his son, Indrajit, and his brother, Kumbhakarna, and
Ram’s army of monkeys set Lanka aflame. He clings to Sita and refuses to turn
to Ram. He finds meaning in Sita because he sees her as Ram’s property. He
wants to violate Ram by claiming Sita, whom he views as Ram’s property. Ram,
though, does not see Sita as his property, but as his responsibility. Ram,
however, does not seek to violate Ravana; he simply wants to rescue Sita, for her
security is the responsibility of the Raghu clan, into which she was given in
marriage. He fights not because he wants what is ‘his’ back, but because he
refuses to value ‘her’. In fact, after the battle is over, he does not expect her to
follow him; he offers her a choice to go wherever she wishes and she chooses to
return with him to Ayodhya.
In the Mahabharata, when Krishna kills Kansa, he simply kills a man who
threatens his life. It is an act of defence, not offence. This is violence, not
violation. There is no desire to dominate Kansa, to hurt or humiliate him.
However, Jarasandha feels violated, because Kansa to him is his social body, his
property, on whom his self-esteem rests. He attacks Mathura, intent on killing
Krishna, and burns the city to the ground. This act is violation, adharma. Later,
with the help of Bhima, Krishna gets Jarasandha killed. Again the desire is not to
hurt or humiliate Jarasandha or dominate him, but to enable Yudhishthira to be
king, make him sovereign, something that Jarasandha would not have allowed.
Duryodhana’s decision to disrobe Draupadi and not return Pandava land
comes from the desire to violate the Pandavas. By violating them, he nourishes
his aham. Krishna does not want Arjuna to do the same. He wants Arjuna to
fight without seeking to violate his enemies. He does not indulge Bhima’s
bloodlust. Violence is unavoidable in the world, for it enables the living to
nourish themselves, but violation is nothing but a vulgar indulgence of aham for
its own self-aggrandizement.

Violence and Violation


In the Bhagavata Purana, there is the story of Gajendra, the king of
elephants, who in a state of ‘musth’, enters a pond of lotus flowers to sport with
his harem of cow elephants, when suddenly a crocodile grabs his leg and drags
him underwater. Gajendra tries to escape, but in vain, as no one comes to his
rescue. Lost, helpless, he prays to Vishnu, who appears and strikes the crocodile
away.
This is a metaphor for a mind consumed by passion, seeking gratification in
the material world and suddenly finding the world turning against it, becoming
even more hostile. The solution is not to fight harder, for that only leads to the
crocodile tightening its grip. The solution is to stop fighting and have faith that
another force will intervene.

Gajendra Moksha

In the story, Gajendra chooses to see himself as a victim and the crocodile as
a villain. If he wins, he will be hailed as a hero and if he loses, he will still be
hailed as a martyr who died trying. But the observer can see that the crocodile is
no villain: it looks upon Gajendra either as threat, or as food. The crocodile’s
violence is not violation. But Gajendra sees it as violation, as he is in a state of
mada, seeing himself as the king of elephants, master of all the cow elephants,
loved and feared by all, and not as an animal, prey to a predator. Rather than
imagining violation, being heroic or acting like a martyr, Vedic wisdom suggests
that we recognize maya, moha and mada at work, stop struggling over imagined
boundaries, and have faith that life is shaped by many other forces, not just the
ones we have control over.
As long as we don’t have faith, we carry the burden of solving all problems.
We will be impatient and fight and cling. Wisdom is enjoying things that drift in
and letting go of things that drift away, like watching the waves drift in and out
of the beach.

Arjuna, those who keep thinking of property get attached to it and crave
it relentlessly, which causes frustration, which leads to anger, then
confusion, then loss of memory, then loss of intelligence, and eventually
destruction.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, verses 62 and 63
(paraphrased).

There is no violation in nature. Only violence. Violation follows when


we grant meaning to things and derive our identity from them. We are
attached to property as long as we are disconnected from atma.
17.
You and I can be generous

Moksha is liberation from the fear that makes us cling. Only when we let go can
we be materially and emotionally and intellectually generous. This alternative to
the trap of rebirth is ofered by Krishna in Chapter 8 of The Gita. The tug-of-war
between the inner world of liberation and the outer world of entrapment is
elaborated in Chapter 15 of The Gita. In Chapter 18 of The Gita, Krishna
clarifies whether letting go involves giving up of action itself, or giving up the
expectation for a particular reaction.

Chapter 15 begins with a spectacular visual to explain the world we live in.

Arjuna, there is a banyan tree that grows upside down, its roots in the
sky and its trunk below. The wise know that Veda constitutes its leaves.
The branches go up and down, as a consequence of nature’s tendencies,
nourished by experiences. The aerial roots that grow down are actions
born of desire that bind it to the realm of men. Wisdom alone can cut
these downward roots, enabling discovery of the reverse banyan tree,
with its primal roots, before enchantment of the senses began and
obscured the view.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 15, verses 1 to 4
(paraphrased).
The banyan tree is sacred to the Hindus. It symbolizes immortality
(akshaya). But it is unique in that it has primary roots and secondary roots. The
latter grow from its branches and eventually become so thick that it becomes
impossible to distinguish them from the main tree trunk.
In this verse, Krishna visualizes a banyan tree growing from the sky, its
primary roots rising up into the sky, its secondary roots growing down to the
earth. Thus, it is being nourished from above and below. The primary root rising
from the sky is nourished by inner mental reality. The secondary roots going
down to the earth are nourished by external material reality.
The tree is who we are. We are nourished from within as well as without.
Within is the atma that is immortal and infinite, and so does not suffer from the
anxieties of the mortal and the finite. It is neither hungry nor frightened, nor does
it yearn for validation. Without is the world of things, people, our relationships,
our desires and frustrations. When we derive value from the outside, we assume
that our identity is the anxious aham. So Krishna advises Arjuna to use the axe
of knowledge (gyana) to cut down all secondary roots, take refuge in the primary
root of atma and liberate himself. This is moksha, liberation, where we no longer
seek validation from the outside, but feel eternally validated from the inside.
Moksha is liberation from fear.

Arjuna, he who truly understands the truth of mind, matter and material
tendencies is liberated from rebirth, no matter what his lifestyle.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 13, Verse 23 (paraphrased).
Upside-down Banyan Tree

The Buddha spoke of desire (tanha, in Pali) as the cause of all suffering.
Hence he advised people to shun desire by accepting the truth of life—nothing is
fixed or permanent, not even identity.
The Gita, however, speaks of two kinds of identity: external identity or
aham, based on property, and internal identity or atma, based on wisdom. Aham
is the fruit of fear. Atma is the fruit of wisdom. Aham is the seed of kama,
krodha, lobha, moha, mada and matsarya. Atma results in moksha. With atma,
we don’t cling. We don’t seek control. We simply let go. We become generous.
And we allow.
Mada to Moksha

Arjuna, one who gives up conceit and ownership and craving, in other
words the sense of 'I', 'mine' and 'me', will always find peace.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 71 (paraphrased).

How we give things away to others is a good indicator of moksha. In a


yagna, a svaha can be either dakshina, bhiksha or daan. Dakshina is payment for
service received. In other words, with dakshina we repay a debt (rin), complete a
transaction and are free from all obligations. Bhisksha is charity, a good deed
(punya) for which we expect something in exchange—respect, admiration,
acknowledgment or blessings. Daan is giving away things without expecting
anything in return. There is no expectation from the devata. No obligation is
imposed upon him. There is no talk of debt, or fruit of action. In The Gita, daan
can be sattvik, rajasik or tamasik. Dakshina and bhiksha are equated with rajasik
daan.

Arjuna, charity that is given to a suitable candidate at the right time and
place without expecting him to give anything in return is sattvik; charity
given unwillingly or to get something in return is rajasik; charity given
without thought, at the wrong time and place to unsuitable candidates
out of contempt and disrespect is tamasik.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 17,
verses 20 to 22 (paraphrased).

This is elaborated in two stories, one from the Mahabharata and one from the
Bhagavata. Both stories have the same beginning but very different endings.
Two childhood friends, out of affection for each other, promise to share all
that they possess even when they grow into adulthood. One is the son of a
nobleman, the other the son of a priest. Fortune favours the nobleman’s son, not
the priest’s son. Reduced to abject poverty, the desperate but hesitant priest’s son
decides to approach his rich friend.
In the Mahabharata, Drupada, king of Panchala, insults the pauper Drona for
assuming that promises of childhood matter in adulthood. He tells Drona to earn
a service fee, or beg for alms, as befits a priest, rather than demand a share of the
royal fortune in the name of friendship, as if it was his right. Friendship can only
exist between equals, he is told. A furious Drona leaves the palace, determined
to become Drupada’s equal—a decision that leads to a spiral of vendetta that
culminates in the bloody carnage at Kuru-kshetra with Drona supporting the
Kauravas and Drupada supporting the Pandavas.
In the Bhagavata, however, the pauper is Sudama and the king, Krishna. He
is warmly welcomed and showered with lavish gifts by his rich friend.
Drupada does what a king is supposed to: lay down the law, tell Drona not to
curry personal favours and advise him to behave instead in keeping with his role
in society. As a priest, Drona can either ask for a fee (dakshina) if services are
rendered, or for alms (bhiksha) if no services are rendered. Drupada,
unfortunately, does not do darshan: he does not see that Drona is embarrassed by
his need to ask for help, so hides his awkwardness by reminding Drupada of his
childhood promise and ‘demanding’ his share. Drona also does not do darshan:
he is too consumed by his poverty to notice that Drupada is a changed man, not
the friend he once knew.
Sudama, on the other hand, despite being poor, is sensitive to the change of
status over the years. He does darshan of Krishna and realizes his childhood
friend may not recognize him, considering that years have passed and fortunes
have changed. Despite his poverty, he carries a gift for Krishna: a packet of
puffed rice saved by denying himself a few meals. Krishna also does darshan of
Sudama, does not gloat over the latter’s poverty but instead demands affection,
even a gift, making Sudama realize he is still remembered and much loved.
Sudama, overwhelmed by Krishna’s generosity, asks for nothing, only to
discover he is given everything.
Daan creates neither obligations nor expectations. It is an indicator of
moksha. Moksha follows when we do not feel we have to cling to our wealth or
dominate people around us, because we do not derive our identity either from
our wealth or our power. Wealth and power are just tools to make our life
comfortable, and enable those around us.

Types of Charity

Another indicator of moksha is allowing, which is essentially emotional


generosity. We notice that the Ramayana ends in tragedy, with Sita being
banished. The Bhagavata also ends with heartbreak, with Krishna promising
Radha, the gopikas and his mother, Yashoda, that he will come back, but not
returning because of his obligations in Mathura. Even the Mahabharata ends
with the realization of the curse hurled by Gandhari at Krishna for not
preventing the death of her children, or those of Draupadi.
However, a sad Sita is not angry at Ram. She knows him and understands
him well, his wisdom, his love, as well as the burdens of kingship that limit him.
A heartbroken Radha is not angry at Krishna. She too understands that Krishna
has to walk his path, and even she cannot be his companion, as she has familial
obligations. A thoughtful Krishna is not angry at Gandhari. He understands her
rage, her inability to take responsibility for her blindfold that contributed to her
children’s insecurity. Sita does not derive her identity from Ram. Radha does not
derive her identity from Krishna. Krishna does not derive his identity from
Gandhari. All three are immersed in dehi, atma, kshetri, brahmana and
bhagavan. Each one is an inverted banyan tree, forever nourished by the sky, and
forever nourishing the earth.

Limited to Limitlessness

Am I aware of my fears that make me greedy, stingy and controlling?


What stops me from being generous materially, emotionally and
intellectually? Liberation, essentially, is letting go of our insecurities that
disconnect us from others.
18.
You and I matter to each other

Generosity presupposes the other. Monastic traditions focus on isolating the self
from the other. The Gita, however, is the doctrine of the householder, not the
hermit, the one who does not withdraw from the battlefield but fights without
attachment or hatred, and so is neither violated nor violates. So while Buddhism
speaks of anatta (absence of atma) and nirvana (oblivion of self), The Gita
speaks of atma-rati, the joy of the immortal within, and brahma-nirvana,
discovery of the other. This relationship between the self (jiva-atma) and the
other (param-atma) forms the theme of this, our final chapter. Krishna introduces
this idea early on in The Gita, as samadhi, in Chapter 2.

The Gita ends twice. First, with Krishna concluding his discourse.

Arjuna, thus have I passed on the most secrets of secrets. Reflect on it


and do as you wish. If you trust me completely and forsake all other
paths, know that I will liberate you. Do not share this knowledge with
the cynical, disdainful or disinterested. Those who share my words, I
adore. Those who hear my words, even without understanding, are
blessed with joy. I hope you have focussed on what I said. I hope this
knowledge has shattered all delusion.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18,
verses 63 to 72 (paraphrased).
Arjuna confirms that his delusion is shattered and perspective has been
replaced by focus. He stands firm, with clear resolve and no doubts, ready to do
as told.
Sanjaya then concludes The Gita once again, expressing his gratitude
towards Vyasa for giving him the telepathic sight that enabled him to hear
Krishna’s wise words and see Krishna’s magnificent form. Finally, in the last
paragraph of The Gita, he gives his personal take on Krishna’s discourse.

Where Krishna yokes the mind and Arjuna bears the bow, there is
always fortune, success, dominion, stability, and law. That is my
opinion.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, Verse 78 (paraphrased).

The difference between the two conclusions is stark. Krishna’s conclusion is


rather psychological. Sanjaya’s conclusion is very material. Krishna offers
Arjuna liberation from worldly fetters (moksha) if Arjuna demonstrates faith in
him by performing his role as a warrior, for the benefit of others, without any
expectation of reward. Sanjaya believes Krishna’s discourse holds five promises:
fortune (shri), success (vijaya), dominion (bhu), stability (dhruva) and law (niti).
Arjuna’s problem concerned only him, but Krishna’s solution made him
consider the other. Sanjaya is the other: the embodiment of the people of
Hastinapur, who are overlooked in the war between the Pandavas and the
Kauravas. For Sanjaya, The Gita is clearly a discourse meant for kings, who are
expected to rule, take responsibility for their subjects and usher in peace and
prosperity, rather than fight wars in self-indulgence. It is Sanjaya’s appeal to
Dhritarashtra to listen to The Gita and outgrow his own victimhood, that blinds
him to the plight of others.

Arjuna, whatever a noble person does, the world follows. —Bhagavad


Gita: Chapter 3, Verse 21 (paraphrased).

Sanjaya’s conclusion connects The Gita to Vaishnava mythology, for Shri


and Bhu are proper nouns, referring to the two consorts of Vishnu, who is also
known as Vijaya, the victorious one. Vishnu is visualized as the king of the
universe, dressed in regal attire, attended by his queens: Shri, who embodies
intangible fortunes such as sovereignty, glory, fame and charisma; and Bhu, who
embodies tangible fortune like the earth and its treasures. Dhruva and Niti are
Vishnu’s devotees. Dhruva embodies the Pole Star, a child who wants to sit on
Vishnu’s lap, the only seat from which no one can pull him down, so that he can
enjoy forever the affection of his divine father. Niti means law, that is of value
only when it submits to the idea of Vishnu, which is dharma. With dharma, law
will help the helpless and provide justice (nyaya) to all. Without dharma, law
will be a tool for control, oppression and even sabotage.
We must remind ourselves of the period when the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata came to be written. It was a time when kinship was giving way to
kingship, meaning that communities included not just members of the same
extended family or tribe (kin), but also members of other families, tribes and
clans. Thus, the Ramayana is the story of the descendants of Ikshvaku engaging
with outsiders—va-naras and rakshasas, who follow the jungle way. The
Mahabharata is the story of tension within the Kuru clan itself, between two
branches of the same family. The central issue in both epics is property: the
thrones of Ayodhya, Kishkinda and Lanka in the Ramayana and the throne of
Hastinapur in the Mahabharata. A good king was supposed to be one who took
care of those he called his own (mama) as well as the rest (para). Ram is
considered the greatest king, as he was more concerned about his kingdom and
his family’s reputation than his personal happiness. Krishna is considered the
greatest kingmaker, as he shows the Pandavas that war is not about vengeance or
ambition, it is about governance.

Arjuna, there is nothing in the three worlds that I need to do or gain. Yet
I work, for if I don’t, others won’t, and I will be the cause of confusion
and destruction of all that has been created.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 3,
verses 22 to 24 (paraphrased).

Vishnu reclines on the coils of a serpent. The image of a man seated under
the hood of a serpent was typically used to depict leaders of monastic
movements, such as the Buddha, for example, and the Jain tirthankara Parsva-
nath. By making Vishnu occupy the same seat, the Puranas were communicating
the message that a great man did not have to be a monk; he could also be king.
The Gita is Vedic wisdom customized to the needs of king and kingdom. The
kingdom needs the king but the king also needs the kingdom.
Under the Serpent Hood

The Gita introduces a subtle tension between the concepts of dharma and
moksha. Dharma demands social engagement, while moksha is about social
disengagement. Dharma is about building relationships. Moksha is about
abandoning relationships. Dharma binds people to society. Moskha enables them
to break free. In Vedic times, dharma was seen as appropriate for the youth,
while moksha was seen as appropriate for the old, until followers of Buddhism
and Jainism popularized the hermit culture and made it part of the mainstream,
2,500 years ago. In Vedic Hinduism, dharma is valued over moksha. But in
Puranic Hinduism, moksha starts being valued over dharma, indicating the
growing influence of Hindu monastic orders for the past 1,000 years.
Inclusion of Moksha

Today we tend to see moksha as aspirational, almost the goal of Hindu life.
But the concept of ‘goal’ makes sense only in one-life cultures, where existence
has an expiry date. In rebirth cultures there are no expiry dates, hence no goals,
only pursuits that make our endless life meaningful (purusha-artha). Originally
three categories (tri-varga) of pursuit were identified: dharma, artha and kama,
or social obligations, power and pleasure. Later, moksha was included as the
fourth category (chatur-varga). A judge finds moksha to be the best of the three,
while an observer is able to see the contextual appropriateness of each varga.
While artha, kama and moksha focus primarily on the self, dharma alone is
about the other. This is why Krishna keeps speaking about action, not inaction,
engagement, not withdrawal.

Arjuna, when doing your duties, surrender yourself to me, offer all
actions to be, and demonstrate equanimity no matter what the reaction—
you will be liberated and at peace. Fix your mind on me and you will
overcome all obstacles. Rely on your conceit and you will perish.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, verses 56 to 58 (paraphrased).

In Buddhist mythology, Siddhartha Gautama walks away from wife, child,


father and kingdom, and goes into the forest to solve the problem of suffering. In
the forest he encounters and defeats Mara, the demon of desire, to become the
Buddha. In Hindu mythology, Mara is Kama, god of desire, and he is a friend of
Indra, king of the devas. In Indra’s abode, Amaravati, all desires are indulged.
That is why it is called swarga, which means ‘paradise’.
But Indra is insecure and restless; he fears that all his treasures will be taken
away. He has no faith. No temples are built for Indra. Temples are built for
Shiva instead, who opens his third eye and burns Kama to a heap of ash. Shiva’s
abode, Kailasa, is a mountain of stone covered with ice. Nothing grows here.
Nothing can survive here. But it does not matter, for in Shiva’s abode there is no
desire, no hunger, hence no need for food.
In Shiva temples, Shiva is always associated with Shakti, the Goddess. She
manifests as the trough (yoni) in which the solitary stone pillar (lingam)
representing Shiva is made to stand. Shiva may withdraw from the world as a
hermit, but she binds him to the earth, transforms him into a householder and
makes him descend from the lofty inhospitable icy peaks of Kailasa to the
riverside city of Kashi, full of markets and crematoriums. Here, the Goddess
makes him aware of, and attentive to, the desires, hungers and fears of those who
are not as resourceful, capable and accomplished as he. The self is made to
empathize with the inadequacies of the other and feel love, not disdain. She is
Kamakshi, whose eyes evoke desire. Through her desire is reborn, but located in
the other. She is Paramita, the one who completes the self through the other
(para/param). She is Annapoorna, who provides food for all, and he becomes
Bhikshatan, the beggar, who begs for others. They create two children: the
corpulent elephant-headed Ganesha and the mighty lance-bearing Kartikeya,
embodiments of Shiva’s grace as he acknowledges the human struggle with
meaning and validation.
When Siddhartha Gautama finally returns from the forest, he is an
enlightened teacher, not a wise husband, father, son or king. His wisdom causes
detachment. In other words he returns, but does not reconnect. But in Hindu
epics, return from the forest is always about reconnection. In the Ramayana,
palace intrigues force Ram to go to the forest, where he discovers, and rejects,
the ways of the jungle and returns to be a great king. In the Mahabharata, the
Pandavas are born in the forest, and they return to the forest for the first time
when their lives are threatened by the Kauravas, the second time after they
gamble away their fortune and the third time after having ruled Hastinapur
successfully for a very long time. With each return, they are wiser in the ways of
society. While the forest teaches the Buddha to disconnect from all relationships,
it enables the protagonists of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata to connect and
be better at relationships.
Return of the Buddha, Ram and the Pandavas from the Forest
In Patanjali’s Yoga-sutra, there are eight steps, which involve gradual
withdrawal from society through the body, breath, senses and mind towards the
atma. The final step is called samadhi, and is said to be a union with the infinite.
For a hermit, samadhi refers to the ability to voluntarily leave his physical body
and merge with the infinite. For the householder, it means something else. And
the clue lies in the structure of the word itself.
The word ‘samadhi’ is based on two words: ‘sama’ that means the first beat
of the musical cycle in Hindustani classical music and ‘adi’ that means primal
origin. The hermit’s journey begins by withdrawing from the other. The
householder’s journey ends by returning to the other. It is the return to the first
beat. It is the return to the primal origin. It is about returning from the forest
liberated (moksha) to reconnect (yoga) with those we left behind, those who are
very different from us (brahma-nirvana).
The hermit may seek zero (shunya), hence withdrawal and oblivion
(nirvana). But the householder can seek infinity (ananta), hence participation,
which leads to expansion of the mind to accommodate the infinite truths of those
around (brahma-nirvana). Krishna thus makes moksha an outcome of dharma.

Arjuna, he who is at peace with himself, happy with himself, illuminated


by the knowledge of the resident within all beings, finds supreme bliss
everywhere. He does not see himself as separate and disconnected and
finds happiness in the happiness of all creatures. This state of being
exists everywhere for the wise one who has outgrown desire and rage.—
Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 5, verses 24 to 26 (paraphrased).
Return to the Origin

If Indra’s heaven, swarga, is about indulging desires, hungers and fears, and
Shiva’s heaven, Kailasa, is about outgrowing desires, hungers and fears, then
Vishnu’s heaven, Vaikuntha, is about outgrowing desires, hungers and fears of
the self by gaining perspective on the desires, hungers and fears of others.
Vaikuntha is located on the shore-less ocean of milk. This ocean of milk is a
metaphor for nature (prakriti), its shore-less state indicating that it has no
purpose or destination, and milk indicating that all wealth is ultimately churned
out of nature. Here Vishnu lies in deep slumber until the cries of the earth
goddess wake him up and force him to watch the rise and fall of human
societies, the alternating victories and defeats of the devas and the asuras who
seek control over the world. Vishnu descends in various moral forms (avatars) to
help everyone appreciate the reality of nature (prakriti) and the potential of
humanity (purusha).
Besides being a saviour, Vishnu is also an enjoyer (rasika) of the various
flavours (rasa) of existence. His temples contain dancing halls (natya-mandapa),
food halls (bhoga-mandapa), assembly halls (jaga-mohana) and wedding halls
(kalyana-mandapa). They are associated with fine music, fragrances and
garments.
Unlike the independent Shiva made dependable by Shakti, Vishnu displays
vulnerability and dependence on the other when he descends as Ram and
Krishna, for the other also wants to feel powerful and valued, and this can only
happen when the self ‘consumes’ the other. I want you to need me. If you do not
need me, and only give me, without taking anything from me, I feel inadequate,
meaningless, valueless and purposeless. In wanting me, you illuminate me and
contribute to my fulfilment. Likewise, you want me to need you. If I do not need
you, if I am dependable but detached, you will feel insulted, hurt, unwanted, and
I will appear patronizing.

Brahma

Vishnu stories in the Ramayana, Bhagavata and Mahabharata reveal how he


experiences birth, death and even heartbreak. Both Ram and Krishna display
human emotions, yearning for the beloved. Though God, Ram cannot be with
Sita, Krishna cannot be with Radha. Yet they do not turn bitter, angry or
vengeful. They love unconditionally.
This idea of a vulnerable god, who gets as much as he gives, is unique to
Hinduism. While the transformation of the wise Buddha of old Buddhism into
the compassionate Bodhisattva of later Buddhism mirrors the transformation of
the hermit Shiva into the householder Shankara, the idea of Vishnu, who is at
once king and hermit and lover, who not only cares for but needs the other, is
unique to Vaishnava mythology.
Hermit to Householder

Neither Sita, who Vishnu abandons as Ram, nor Radha, who he abandons as
Krishna, begrudges him. They also love him unconditionally. Love, in either
case, does not guarantee happiness. Love, in either case, does not manifest as
control. Loving is its own reward, the ultimate human possibility. This is atma-
rati, feeling fulfilled in doing the deed without expecting a reward, referred to in
Chapter 3, Verse 7. This is the outcome of brahma-sthithi, being firm in the
understanding of human imagination, referred to in Chapter 2, Verse 72. It
follows accepting oneself as nimitta-matra, instrument of a larger narrative,
referred to in Chapter 11, Verse 33.

Swarga, Kailasa, Vaikuntha


Buddhism popularized the hermit practice of shutting the eyes and
contemplating (dhyana) while Puranic Hinduism popularized the householder
practice of opening the eyes and seeing the deity in the temple (darshan). In one,
there is focus on the inner journey. In the other, the inner journey is meant to
facilitate the outer journey.
The Buddhist concept of nirvana offers freedom from suffering by realizing
that even the idea of the self is manufactured by the mind. The Gita’s concept of
brahma-nirvana offers awareness of, and empathy for, the manufactured
anxieties of the other, their need to control and dominate and cling, their
inability to let go despite being enabled and empowered to do so. The more we
observe the other, without judgement, the more we see ourselves mirrored in
them. We realize our manufactured anxieties that indulge our manufactured
selves.

Arjuna, he who is always aware of the divine, and unites with the divine,
within and without, will always be at peace and blissful.—Bhagavad
Gita: Chapter 6, Verse 15 (paraphrased).

Typically, we are trapped in a world where there is conflict between my


kshetra and your kshetra. I compare what I have with what you have and this
leads to conflict and competition as between the Pandavas and the Kauravas.
Darshan begins when I look at your aham, the hungers and fears that constitute
your imagined identity, and discover my aham, fears and hungers that constitute
my imagined identity. This is what Krishna asks Arjuna to do. Only then do we
discover the atma that permeates all beings and all things, that is infinite,
immortal and at peace.
The Journey of The Gita

In other words, darshan of the other leads to darshan of the self. Darshan
without leads to darshan within. This is atma-gyana, self-awareness that enables
us to accept, maybe even outgrow, our own anxieties and be kinder to ourselves,
and others, even in a fight.
This is the promise of The Gita, revealed through me to you.

Can you and I participate in a relationship without seeking to control the


behaviour of the other? Can we help each other outgrow our hungers and
fears? Then we are on the path of brahma-nirvana. When we derive joy
from within, not from achievements outside, we are on the path of atma-
rati.
After My Gita: Yet Another Discourse by Krishna

A fter The Gita, there was the Kama Gita, the song of the god of desire, and
then the Anu Gita, the follow-up Gita, both narrated by Krishna. This is
how they come about.

Kama Gita

As he concludes the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna asks Arjuna if he has heard


what has been said and if he is free of confusion. Yes, says Arjuna.
Krishna, by your grace, I am no longer deluded or confused. I remember
what I am supposed to do. I am firm. I have no doubts. I shall do as you
say.—Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 18, Verse 73 (paraphrased).

Arjuna then blows his conch shell, announcing the start of the war, and lets
Krishna take him into battle. Krishna’s perspective brings back Arjuna’s focus;
confusion is replaced by clarity, paralysis with action. All is well that ends well.
At least, so we think.
But as the days of the war progress, Arjuna shows repeated moments of
doubt, despair and dilemma. He is unable to bring himself to kill Bhisma who is
like a father to him, Drona who is his teacher and Karna who stands before him
unarmed, despite Krishna goading him on to do so.
After the war too, doubts persist.
In Ashwamedika Parva, Book 14 of the Mahabharata, Arjuna overhears
Krishna present the very short Kama Gita to his eldest brother:
‘Yudhishthira, hear what Kama, god of craving, says about himself. He who
seeks to destroy craving with weapons ends up craving those very weapons. He
who seeks to destroy craving with charity ends up craving charity. He who seeks
to destroy craving with scriptures ends up craving scriptures. He who seeks to
destroy craving with truth ends up craving truth. He who seeks to destroy
craving with austerities ends up craving austerities. He who seeks to destroy
craving with renunciation ends up craving renunciation. Craving cannot be
destroyed, but it can be put to good use by locating it in dharma. So seek to
destroy craving with the pursuit of dharma. You will ends up craving dharma!
And that will be good for the whole world, for you will then conduct more and
more exchange, bring prosperity to the world, liberating yourself in the process
from all obligations, enabling others to give without expectations.’
Arjuna then approaches Krishna, just when he is about to leave for Dwaraka,
with a request to repeat what he had said at the start of the war. ‘Really!’ replies
Krishna, surprised, even a little irritated, by the request. ‘You want me to
recollect all that I had said then? That was a tense and inspired moment. I was in
a state of full awareness, fully connected with the world and my faculties. That
moment has passed.’
But still Krishna presents the Anu Gita, or the follow-up Gita, which is also
located in Ashwamedika Parva, Book 14 of the Mahabharata. The knowledge
provided in the Anu Gita is secondary. Krishna recalls three conversations: the
first one between a sage called Kashyapa and a learned Brahmin, the second one
between the Brahmin and his wife and the third one between the Brahmin and
his student. The conversation is long: thirty-six chapters, double that of the
Bhagavad Gita, and far less lucid. Here, the quest for wisdom is described as
journeying from one forest of metaphors to another. As in the Vyadha Gita and
the Bhagavad Gita, reference is made to the wise King Janaka of Mithila, who
was seen as the champion of the Upanishads, Sita’s father in the Ramayana.
When this discourse ends, Krishna hopes that by sharing these three
conversations of ancient sages, Arjuna has regained his knowledge of the
Bhagavad Gita. Then he leaves.
As in most other Gitas, the Anu Gita elaborates on karma and gyana, not
bhakti. Perhaps Arjuna’s emotional breakdown on the battlefield created the
need for an innovation: an emotional anchor, faith in someone outside, someone
bigger than everyone and everything around, someone who supports and cares
unconditionally. In other words, God! Krishna does not present himself as
bhagavan in the Anu Gita, though Arjuna does identify and venerate Krishna as
bhagavan in the final chapter of the Anu Gita, as the two ride out to Dwaraka.
As the Mahabharata draws to a close, we are told that Arjuna, recipient of
multiple discourses of Vedic wisdom from Krishna himself, lands up in hell
(naraka) after his death, because of demerits accumulated owing to his insecurity
and arrogance. He has to stay there until he is cleansed and only then can he rise
to swarga, the paradise of his father, Indra. Even here, stay is impermanent, only
as long as his merits last. Vishnu’s Vaikuntha remains elusive.
Arjuna may be the hero of the Mahabharata, Krishna’s companion and
recipient of The Gita. He may be Nara to Krishna’s Narayana. But that does not
make him perfect. Even the state of the world after the war at Kuru-kshetra is far
from perfect. In fact, traditionally, it marks the dawn of Kali yuga, the final era
of a culture, before collapse. So much for Krishna’s intervention!
The yearning for perfection stems from the desire to control and organize the
world to our taste, to create a cocoon where everything makes sense to us. It
demands that we judge the world as a problem that needs fixing, chaos that
needs to be organized, a disease that needs to be cured, a polluted space that
needs purification. It assumes that the world needs to have a climax, a happy
ending, or else life is a tragedy. These are typical of finite narratives, where there
is only one life to lead.

Climax of Finite Narratives


The word ‘perfect’ cannot be translated in Sanskrit, or any Indian language.
The closest we come to it is excellent (uttam) and complete or comprehensive
(purnatva), a reminder that Eden is not a Hindu concept. There is no fall from
perfection, as in Abrahamic mythology. Nor is culture a journey out of chaos
into order, as in Greek mythology. We can at best keep expanding our mind,
keep getting more understanding, as we make the journey from limited reality
(mithya) to limitless infinite reality (satya). Wisdom comes with the realization
that other people’s karma that impacts our life cannot be wished away. And this
is most evident in the concept of Ram Rajya, the ‘perfect’ kingdom of Ram
described in the Ramayana.
In Ram Rajya, everything is predictable, everything is pure, all wishes are
fulfilled and everyone is taken care of. But then a Brahmin’s son dies
prematurely, because a ‘low-caste’ man called Shambuka wants to be a hermit
and so has abandoned his vocation. And people gossip about Sita’s stay in
Ravana’s palace, and a washerman (dhobi) calls it a ‘stain’ on the reputation of
the Raghu clan. The desires and meanness of others are beyond Ram’s control.
To restore perfection, Ram has to do terrible things: kill an innocent hermit and
banish an innocent wife. Aspirations are crushed and people are abandoned, in
order to create predictability and purity for the rest. The horrific price of
perfection is thus demonstrated. The physical and psychological violence
generates more karmic ripples that end up as turbulent waves lashing against the
perfection created. Shambuka’s cry and Sita’s anguish haunt Ram Rajya from
without. Ram Rajya turns into rana-bhoomi, under siege by those excluded, like
Indra’s swarga surrounded by angry asuras.
Eventually the Treta yuga gives way to Dvapara yuga, where upright men
like Bhisma and Karna allow the Kauravas to thrive while honest men like
Yudhishthira gamble their kingdom and their wife away, even when Krishna
walks the earth.
Does that make the Ramayana and the Mahabharata tragedies, since they do
not have happy endings? Attempts to classify the epics so are themselves
judgemental, against the very spirit in which they were composed. The epics
simply end with the death of their protagonists: Ram dies in Book 7 of the
Ramayana while Krishna dies in the Mausala Parva, Book 16 of the
Mahabharata; Arjuna dies in Book 17. Ram walks into the river Sarayu, and a
stray arrow kills Krishna. Both have a smile on their lips when they die for they
know death is not the end: another life awaits. Arjuna on the other hand slips
while climing a mountain and dies in disappointment, having failed to reach
swarga.
Beginning and End of Hindu Epics

The Gita does not aspire for perfection. Hence, there are no rules in The
Gita, only three paths to establish relationships: karma yoga, bhakti yoga and
gyana yoga that deal with human conduct, human emotions and human identity.
These three routes are interdependent. One cannot exist without the other.
Without karma yoga, we have nothing to give, or receive from, the other.
Without bhakti yoga, we are machines that feel nothing for the other. Without
gyana yoga, we have no value, purpose or meaning. There can be no bhakta who
does not do or understand. There can be no gyani who does not do or feel. There
can be no karmi who does not feel or understand. The optimal functioning of the
hands (karma) depends on the head (gyana) and the heart (bhakti). A yogi
simultaneously does, feels and understands.

Interdependence of the Three Yogas

Krishna presents these three paths to Arjuna like a mother lays out food.
Arjuna has the option of eating what he feels like, what his body craves for. No
matter what he eats, he has no control over the digestion, what his body will
finally assimilate. The final outcome is dependent not just on his will (sankalpa)
but also his natural tendencies (guna) and, of course, whatever he is supposed to
experience (karma). Hence, Krishna is not disappointed when Arjuna’s doubts
and despair resurface again and again. It is how it is supposed to be.

Arjuna, some discover the divine through meditation and introspection,


others decipher it through logic and analysis, others experience it
through activity, and still others are introduced to it by listening to
others. All are able to overcome the fear of mortality.—Bhagavad Gita:
Chapter 13, verses 24 and 25 (paraphrased).

Krishna knows that in a world without boundaries, there will always be


another chance, and then another.
Recommended Reading

For a literal, readable translation of The Gita without commentary:


• Debroy, Bibek. The Bhagavad Gita. New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2005.
• Nabar, Vrinda and Tumkur, Shanta. The Bhagavad Gitā. Hertfordshire, UK: Wordsworth Classics, 1997.
• Menon, Ramesh. The Shrimad Bhagavad Gita. Delhi: Rupa Publications, 2004.
• Miller, Barbara. The Bhagavad-Gita. New York: Bantam Press, 1986.

For a readable translation that also captures the poetic spirit of The Gita:
• Rao, Mani. Bhagavad Gita. New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2011.
• Mitchell, Stephen. Bhagavad Gita. London: Random House, 2000.

For a verse-by-verse translation of The Gita with commentary:


• Easwaran, Eknath. The Bhagavad Gita. Mumbai: Jaico Publications, 1997.
• Sivananda, Swami. Bhagavad Gita. Divine Life Society Trust, 2008.
• Radhakrishnan, S. The Bhagavadgita. Delhi: HarperCollins India,2008.

For appreciating the history of The Gita:


• Davis, Richard. The ‘Bhagavad Gita’: a Biography. Princeton, USA: Princeton University Press, 2016.
• Desai, Meghnad. Who Wrote the Bhagavadgita: a Secular Inquiry into a Sacred Text. Delhi:
HarperCollins India, 2014.

For appreciating the Vedas, the Puranas and other Hindu literature:
• Agarwal, Satya P. Selection from the Mahabharata: Reaffirming Gita’s call for good of all. New Delhi:
Motilal Banarsidass, 2002.
• Dange, Sadashiv Ambadas. Encyclopaedia of Puranic Beliefs and Practices, Vol: 1–5. New Delhi:
Navran, 1990.
• Flood, Gavin. An Introduction to Hinduism. New Delhi: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
• Frawley, David. From the River of Heaven. New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1992.
• Jaini, Padmanabh S. The Jaina Path of Purification. New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1979.
• Mani, Vettam. Puranic Encyclopaedia. New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1996.
• Stall, Frits. Discovery of the Vedas. New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 2008.
• Zimmer, Heinrich. Myths and Symbols in Indian Art and Civilization. New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass,
1990.

For appreciating how imagination and language (brahmana) play a key role in human development:
• Coupe, Lawrence. Myth [The New Critical Idiom Series]. London: Routledge, 1997.
• Harari, Yuval Noah. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. London: Harvill Secker, 2014.
• Pagel, Mark. Wired for Culture. London: Penguin Books UK, 2012.

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